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Thirty years of agitation: everything you want to know about reform and opening up is in it.

I first read this book on 20 14, when I graduated from graduate school and lost my innocence as a student, so it was difficult to settle down and read a long book.

But this book kept me awake for days and nights, from beginning to end. Until now, this book is also a permanent guest in my KINDLE. Turn it out when you are bored, and you get a lot of gains every time.

This book is a popular science reading of economic history, and it is also the most ambitious and detailed book describing reform and opening up. From a professional point of view, it is a little worse than ronald coase's Changing China (Coase is the winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics, and his professional level is second to none. Changing China is also worth seeing), but it is more readable.

This book tells the story of the growth of enterprises in China from reform and opening up to the Millennium in the form of a chronicle, which spans 30 years from 1978 to 2008. Every year is a chapter. Each chapter chooses policy changes, economic prosperity and social events, interspersed with the life experiences of typical entrepreneurs, which makes people read with relish.

As the main body of reform and opening up, this book divides enterprises into three camps according to ownership: state-owned enterprises, private enterprises and foreign-funded enterprises, and then discusses the trade-offs between them.

The most commendable thing about this book is that it tells the 30-year history of enterprise development in China through the ups and downs of typical entrepreneurs, which is called economic history, and the story is fascinating. Among books describing reform and opening up, Things of the Ming Dynasty, which describes the history of the Ming Dynasty, is better.

Different from other professional economic or financial works, what I admire most about this book is the reflection on the times and life that runs through historical materials.

For example, in the face of setbacks at the beginning of reform and opening up, the determination and foresight of the national leadership collective, he wrote:

"Reform is a particularly complicated social system engineering, which can't be carried out seamlessly in advance. Friction and collision between different interest groups are inevitable in the reform process. "

When describing how personal development adapts to the general trend of social development, he wrote:

"The ups and downs of the world are waves. If people can keep moving forward in the climax, they will certainly succeed. If they can't seize the opportunity, they will waste their lives and accomplish nothing. "

Between patriotism and personal interests, he mentioned the performance of college students in the embassy parade in 1998:

"Students' emotions are very subtle. Students in the computer department of Peking University posted a slogan at the school-'boycott American goods except computers', and more students waited to review TOEFL in the evening after the parade in the daytime. "

When it comes to entrepreneurs eager to occupy the moral high ground after getting rich, he wrote:

"A very prominent phenomenon is that the places where Confucian businessmen emerge the most are often the most popular gray profiteering businesses. The reporter of China Business News once discovered a secret: almost all the real estate giants in China call themselves Confucian businessmen, and the real estate industry in Beijing is even more' everyone has ideas, and Confucian businessmen are everywhere'. "

These records and feelings, people have to sigh Wu Xiaobo's extremely accurate vision of this turbulent era, as well as his extremely keen feeling of the ups and downs of individual destiny.

Thirty years' agitation has almost exhausted all Wu Xiaobo's talents as a financial writer, so that the Biography of Tencent and Ten Years' Agitation: Big Fish in the Water published in these two years are ugly.

In a certain issue of Wu Xiaobo Channel, he answered the audience's question, "Is man improving or deteriorating?" It is mentioned that the most typical depravity is Zhou.

In 1980s, Zhou's book Nietzsche: At the Turning Point of Practice started China's philosophical thinking in that turbulent era.

But after 2000, he could only write about love affairs, throwing useless chicken soup at the public, and degenerating from a pioneer philosopher of change to a vulgar life mentor.

It is appropriate to take Zhou as an example, but unfortunately, his talent has also declined to the extent visible to the naked eye. Or, more accurately, absent-minded

He spent most of his energy on self-media and was busy cashing in and making money. It is understandable to embrace the times and gain wealth, especially for financial writers, who are in contact with wealthy businessmen and powerful people, and the influence of money will be even worse than others.

It's just a work like thirty years of agitation, and no amount of money can change it.

This kind of work requires unparalleled talent, energy and hard work as a sacrifice. After reading this book, I saw young Wu Xiaobo going over mountains and mountains to collect materials during the day and working alone at his desk under a dim desk lamp at night.

Fortunately, in his most talented era, he condensed this book, giving readers a chance to see this grand era, and will always be worthy of Mr. Wu Xiaobo's efforts and efforts for more than 40 years.

Of course, this book is so beautiful, the most fundamental thing is that this era of reform and opening up is thrilling and exciting, and we are all parties.

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