China and the global economy
In: The international library of critical writings in economics 336
In: An Elgar research collection
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In: The international library of critical writings in economics 336
In: An Elgar research collection
In: The international library of critical writings in economics
In: Elgaronline
In: Edward Elgar books
In: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
In: The international library of critical writings in economics series
Recommended readings (Machine generated): 1. Loren Brandt, Debin Ma and Thomas G. Rawski (2014), 'From Divergence to Convergence: Reevaluating the History behind China's Economic Boom', Journal of Economic Literature, 52 (1), March, 45-123 -- 2. Chenggang Xu (2011), 'The Fundamental Institutions of China's Reform and Development', Journal of Economic Literature, 49 (4), December, 1076-151 -- 3. Jeffrey Wasserstrom (2014), 'China and Globalization', Daedalus, 143 (2), Spring, 157-69 -- 4. Douglas Zhihua Zeng (2011), 'How Do Special Economic Zones and Industrial Clusters Drive China's Rapid Development?', Building Engines for Growth and Competitiveness in China: Experience with Special Economic Zones and Industrial Clusters, Chapter 1, Washington, DC, USA: World Bank, 1-54 -- 5. Chenggang Xu and Xiaobo Zhang (2009), 'The Evolution of Chinese Entrepreneurial Firms: Township-Village Enterprises Revisited', IFPRI Discussion Paper 00854, Washington, DC, USA: International Food Policy Research Institute, 1-32 -- 6. Lee Branstetter and Nicholas Lardy (2006), 'China's Embrace of Globalization', in Loren Brandt and Thomas G Rawski (eds), China's Great Economic Transformation, Chapter 16, New York, USA: Cambridge University Press, 633-82 -- 7. Larry Qiu and D Ying Xue (2014), 'Understanding China's Foreign Trade: A Literature Review', China Economic Journal, 7 (2), 168-86 -- 8. Simon Sturn (2014), 'From Internal Imbalances to Global Imbalances: A Survey on the Causes of China's Export-Led Growth', China Economic Journal, 7 (3), 320-42 -- 9. Françoise Lemoine (2013), 'From Foreign Trade to International Investment: A New Step in China's Integration with the World Economy', Economic Change and Restructuring, Special Issue on China: Re-thinking China's Economic Transition and Development in the Post-Crisis Era, 46 (1), March, 25-43 -- 10. John Whalley and Xian Xin (2010), 'China's FDI and Non-FDI Economies and the Sustainability of Future High Chinese Growth', China Economic Review, 21 (1), March, 123-35 -- 11. Gary H. Jefferson and Miao Ouyang (2014), 'FDI Spillovers in China: Why Do The Research Findings Differ So Much?', Journal of Chinese Economic and Business Studies, 12 (1), 1-27 -- 12. Shiyi Chen, Gary H. Jefferson and Jun Zhang (2011), 'Structural Change Productivity Growth and Industrial Transformation in China', China Economic Review, 22 (1), March, 133-50 -- 13. Yasheng Huang (2011), 'Rethinking the Beijing Consensus', Asia Policy, 11 (1), January, 1-26 -- 14. Richard B. Freeman and Wei Huang (2015), 'China's "Great Leap Forward" in Science and Engineering', in Aldo Geuna (ed.), Global Mobility of Research Scientists: The Economics of Who Goes Where and Why, Chapter 6, London, UK: Academic Press, 155-75 -- 15. Albert Guangzhou Hu and Gary H. Jefferson (2009), 'A Great Wall of Patents: What s Behind China's Recent Patent Explosion?', Journal of Development Economics, 90 (1), September, 57-68 -- 16. Yu Yongding (2012), 'Rebalancing the Chinese Economy', Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 28 (3), Autumn, 551-68 -- 17. David Dollar (2013), 'China's Rebalancing: Lessons from East Asian Economic History', Brookings Institution Research Papers, Washington, DC, USA: Brookings Institution, 1-27 -- 18. Jesus Felipe, Utsav Kumar, Norio Usui and Arnelyn Abdon (2013), 'Why Has China Succeeded? And Why Will it Continue to Do So', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 37 (4), July, 791-818 -- 19. Jeffrey Frankel (2016), 'Globalization and Chinese Growth: End of Trends?', HKS Faculty Research Working Paper, Cambridge, USA: Harvard University, 1-20
In: IMF Working Papers v.Working Paper No. 14/135
Since the onset of the Arab Spring, economic uncertainty in Egypt, Jordan, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia, and Yemen (Arab Countries in Transition, ACTs) has slowed already sluggish growth; worsened unemployment, particularly of youth; undermined business confidence, affected tourist arrivals, and depressed domestic and foreign direct investment. Furthermore, political and social tensions have constrained reform efforts. Assessing policy options as presented in the voluminous literature on the Arab Spring and based on cross-country experience, this paper concludes that sustainable and inclusive growt
Since 1978, the World Bank's annual World Development Report (WDR) has provided in-depth analysis and policy recommendations on a specific and important aspect of international development from agriculture, the role of the state, economic growth, and labor to infrastructure, health, the environment, and poverty. In the process, it has become a highly influential publication that is consulted by international organizations, national governments, scholars, and civil society networks to inform their decision-making processes.In this essay, Shahid Yusuf examines the last 30 years of development ec
World Affairs Online
Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Global Integration, Regional Development, and the Dynamics of Urbanization: An Introduction -- Part I Global Systems and the New Dynamics -- Finance, Financial Regulation, and Economic Development: An International Perspective -- Globalization, Foreign Direct Investment, and Urbanization in Developing Countries -- Global Environmental Imperatives and Institutions to Ensure Sustainability -- Part II East Asia and Globalization -- The Greater China Growth Triangle in the Asian Financial Crisis -- Regional Development Policies in Brazil, China, and Indonesia -- The Impact of Globalization on China's Economy -- Globalization and Urbanization in the Republic of Korea -- Cities and Governments -- Urban Governance and Politics in a Global Context: The Growing Importance of Localities -- Crime As a Social Cost of Poverty and Inequality: A Review Focusing on Developing Countries -- Urban Poverty: Some Thoughts About its Scale and Nature and About Responses to It -- Urban Poverty Alleviation in the Age of Globalization in Pacific Asia -- Financing of Subnational Public Investment in India -- Analysis of Spatial Organization and Transportation Demand in an Expanding Urban Area: Sendai, Japan, 1972Ò 92.
In: World Bank Country Study
In: World Bank staff working papers 628
China has acquired enviable growth momentum, manufacturing capabilities are world class, STI system is improving, resource mobilization remains impressive, and trade competitiveness is strong. But ebbing globalization, structural changes, macroeconomic issues, the constraints imposed by corruption, pollution, and aging cloud growth prospects. Overseas commitments, military ambitions are a drain. A number of potential flashpoints increase the threat of conflict. Near term threats are from: domestic financial crisis that derails growth process with serious political consequences; a damaging trade war with the US that drags down global economy; disputes with neighbors and their allies that accidentally or otherwise lead to military action. All three are in the cards, which makes it difficult to claim that China's economy will hum along as smoothly as it has done in the recent past.
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In: Asian‐Pacific Economic Literature, Band 31, Heft 2, S. 19-29
SSRN
In: The developing economies: the journal of the Institute of Developing Economies, Tokyo, Japan, Band 53, Heft 1, S. 63-66
ISSN: 1746-1049
In: IMF Working Paper No. 14/135
SSRN
In: The developing economies: the journal of the Institute of Developing Economies, Tokyo, Japan, Band 50, Heft 4, S. 393-396
ISSN: 1746-1049