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Title
Debt and distortion : risks and reforms in the Chinese financial system / Paul Armstrong-Taylor.
ISBN
9781137534019 (electronic book)
113753401X (electronic book)
9781137534002
Published
London : Palgrave Macmillan, [2016]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource.
Call Number
HG187.C6
Dewey Decimal Classification
332.1/0951
Summary
China’s unprecedented growth has transformed the lives of its people and impacted economies across the globe. The financial system supported this growth by providing cheap loans to boost investment and, in a virtuous cycle, rapid growth insured that these loans could be repaid. However, in recent years, this virtuous cycle has turned vicious. The financial system has continued to lend freely and cheaply as the economy has slowed, and the risk of crisis has mounted. In response, the government has initiated the most ambitious financial reforms in twenty years. Financial markets, businesses and governments are concerned about these risks and are struggling to understand what the reforms will mean for China and the rest of the world. Debt and Distortion: Risks and Reforms in the Chinese Financial System addresses the need for an up-to-date and accessible, yet comprehensive analysis of China’s financial system and related reforms. It will take a systematic look at China’s financial system: how it worked in the past and how it will work in the future; why reforms are needed; what risks they bring; and their impact on China and the rest of the world. By analyzing the topic in terms of a few fundamental distortions, this book makes an otherwise complex topic accessible while simultaneously providing new insights. These distortions provide a simple framework for understanding the nature of the Chinese financial system and its future prospects. Reform in China will transform the world’s second largest economy and impact everything from Peruvian copper mines to the London housing market. Business people, government officials, financiers and informed citizens would all benefit from understanding how changes in China’s financial system will shape the global economy in the coming decades. .
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Digital File Characteristics
data file
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed September 6, 2016).
PART I. CURRENT ECONOMIC MODEL.-1. Growth model
2. Financial risks.-3.Financial repression
4. Government guarantees
5. International distortions
6. Overview
PART II. DOMESTIC REFORMS
7. Banking. 8. Shadow banking.-9. Stock markets.' 10. Bond markets
11. Local government debt
12. Real estate market
PART III. INTERNATIONAL REFORMS
13. Exchange rate liberalization
14. Renminbi internationalization
15. Capital account liberalization
16. Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the New Silk Road
PART IV. POLITICS
17. Political conflicts over reforms
18. Strategies to overcome opposition to reform
PART V. RISKS AND CONSEQUENCES
19. Domestic risks
20. International consequences of reform
21. The Future.-.