Search results
Filter
85 results
Sort by:
The economics and politics of transition to an open market economy: China
In: Technical papers 153
The impact of U.S. policy mix on the ASEAN economies
In: Brookings Discussion Papers in International Economics, 34
Dieses Papier behandelt den Einfluß der amerikanischen Politik auf die Wirtschaftsentwicklung der ASEAN-Staaten in den 80er Jahren. Zunächst wird die Entwicklung der Wirtschaft der ASEAN-Länder überblickartig behandelt. Dann wird versucht, den Anteil der amerikanischen Wirtschaftspolitik herauszustellen; daraus zu ziehende politische Optionen werden vorgestellt. (DÜI-Xyl) + Das Papier wurde erstellt für einen Workshop über ASEAN-US-Wirtschaftsbeziehungen im April 1985
World Affairs Online
SSRN
SSRN
Working paper
China's soft budget constraint on the demand-side undermines its supply-side structural reforms
In: China economic review, Volume 57, p. 101111
ISSN: 1043-951X
An introduction to the first principles for macro-stability and sustainable growth in China's twin new normal
In: China economic review, Volume 57, p. 101137
ISSN: 1043-951X
Decentralisation of Decision-Making Is Key to Better and Fairer Economic Outcomes in Malaysia
In: The round table: the Commonwealth journal of international affairs, Volume 107, Issue 6, p. 815-816
ISSN: 1474-029X
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
Working paper
China's Economic Growth Engine: The Likely Types of Hardware Failure, Software Failure and Power Supply Failure
In: BOFIT Discussion Paper No. 8/2011
SSRN
Working paper
China's economic growth engine: The likely types of hardware failure, software failure and power supply failure
The 6th Plenum of the 16th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) concluded on October 11, 2006, with the commitment to establish a harmonious society by 2020. The obvious implication from this commitment is that the present major social, economic and political trends are not leading to a harmonious society or, at least, not leading to a harmonious society fast enough. Analytically, if the Chinese economy is depicted as a speeding car, there are three classes of failures (a) a hardware failure from the breakdown of an economic mechanism, a development that is analogous to the collapse of the chassis of the car; (b) a software failure from a flaw in governance that creates frequent widespread social disorders that disrupt production economy-wide and discourage private investment, a situation similar to a car crash that resulted from a fight among the people inside the speeding car; and (c) a power supply failure from hitting either a natural limit or an externally-imposed limit, a situation that is akin, respectively, to the car running out of gas or to the car smashing into a barrier erected by an outsider. For hardware failure we discuss the possible weakening of China's fiscal position generated by the repeated recapitalization of the state banks. For software failure, we discuss possible social disorder caused by outmoded governance. And for power supply failure, we discuss the possible trade disputes from China s chronic trade imbalances and the physical constraints posed by China s rapidly deteriorating natural environment.
BASE
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
Working paper