China's financial transition at a crossroads
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
China's financial transition at a crossroads
Columbia University Press, c2007
- : cloth : alk. paper
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: cloth : alk. paperAECC||332||C1617303934
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
China's increasing role in global economic affairs has placed the country at a crossroads: how many and what types of international capital-market transactions will China permit? How will China's financial system change internally? What kind of relationships will the Chinese government develop with foreign financial institutions, especially with those based in the United States? Can China broker a sustainable partnership with America that will avoid sending economic shock waves throughout the world? Drawing on the contemporary research of prominent international scholars, the experts in this volume outline the trajectory of China's financial markets since the advent of reform and anticipate their uncertain future. Chapter authors and commentators include Geert Bekaert, Loren Brandt, Lee Branstetter, Mary Wadsworth Darby, Michael DeStefano, Barry Eichengreen, Campbell Harvey, Fred Hu, Xiaobo Lu, Christian Lundblad, Ailsa Roell, Daniel Rosen, Shang-Jin Wei, Jialin Yu, and Xiaodong Zhu.
The book begins with an overview of the history of financial-sector development, regulation, and performance and then focuses on the banking sector, discussing the progress, challenges, and prospects of current sector reform. Subsequent chapters describe the role of foreign capital in China's development and analyze the changes in capital flows and controls over time; explore various explanations for China's composition of foreign-capital and foreign-exchange policies, particularly the factors shaping China's reliance on foreign direct investment; and provide an international, comparative perspective on the remarkable growth experience of China and the contribution of its institutional environment to that experience. Contributors dispute the belief that stock market listing has done little to reform state-owned enterprises and take a hard look at the exchange rate regime choice for China, considering the potential long-run desirability of flexibility and the appropriate sequencing of reforms in foreign-exchange policy, domestic banking reform, and capital-market openness.
The book concludes with a roundtable discussion in which prominent economists, including Peter Garber, Robert Hodrick, John Makin, David Malpass, Frederic Mishkin, and Eswar Prasad, debate the pace of the appreciation of China's currency and the likely consequences of that policy within and outside of China.
Table of Contents
List of Acronyms Acknowledgments Introduction, by Charles W. Calomiris 1. China's Financial Markets: An Overview, by Lee Branstetter Comment: Xiaobo Lu 2. China's Banking Sector and Economic Growth, by Loren Brandt and Xiaodong Zhu Comment: Michael DeStefano 3. Understanding the Structure of Cross- Border Capital Flows: The Case of China, by Eswar Prasad and Shang- Jin Wei Comment: Daniel H. Rosen 4. Financial Openness and the Chinese Growth Experience, by Geert Bekaert, Campbell R. Harvey, and Christian Lundblad Comment: Mary Wadsworth Darby 5. The Effects of Stock Market Listing on the Financial Per for mance of Chinese Firms, by Fred Hu Comment: Ailsa Roell 6. China's Exchange Rate Regime: The Long and Short of It, by Barry Eichengreen Comment: Jialin Yu 7. China's Foreign Exchange Policy: What Will China Do? What Should China Do?, by Peter Garber, Robert J. Hodrick, John H. Makin, David Malpass, Frederic S. Mishkin, and Eswar Prasad Appendix 1. Regional Estimates of New Deposit and Loan Shares, and Nonperforming Loans, by Loren Brandt and Xiaodong Zhu Appendix 2. Evolution of Capital Controls in China, by Eswar Prasad and Shang- Jin Wei List of Contributors Index
by "Nielsen BookData"