| Organization | Date | Title | Keywords |
|---|---|---|---|
| Committee of 100 | 06.25.12 | U.S.-China Public Perceptions Opinion Survey 2012The re-establishment of U.S.-China relations in 1971 marked a strategic step that ended China’s isolation and transformed the global balance of power. Since that historic milestone, the United States as an established superpower and China as an emerging... | Surveys, U.S.-China Relations |
| Rhodium Group | 06.11.12 |
China Invests in Europe Thilo Hanemann and Daniel H. Rosen Europe is experiencing the start of a structural surge in outbound direct investment in advanced economies by Chinese firms. The take-off was only recent: annual inflows tripled from 2006 to 2009, and tripled again by 2011 to $10 billion (€7.4 billion)... |
European Union |
| International Monetary Fund (IMF) | 05.1.12 |
China’s Impact on World Commodity Markets Shaun K. Roache Shocks to aggregate activity in China have a significant and persistent short-run impact on the price of oil and some base metals. In contrast, shocks to apparent commodity-specific consumption (in part reflecting inventory demand) have no effect on... |
Business, Supply and Demand |
| International Monetary Fund (IMF) | 05.1.12 |
RMB Internationalization: Onshore/Offshore Links Samar Maziad, Joong Shik Kang Among emerging market currencies, the RMB holds the most potential to become widely used internationally, due to China‘s large economic size, diversified trade structure and network, macroeconomic stability, and high growth rates - both current and... |
Renminbi, Exchange Rates, Renminbi Internationalization |
| American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research | 04.1.12 |
Is China Slowing Down? John H. Makin With problems in the manufacturing, housing, and export sectors in China, we will likely see slower gross domestic product growth for the world’s second largest economy in 2012. China’s leadership is changing for the first time in a decade, and its new... |
GDP, Trade, Investment, Economic Growth |
| Congressional Research Service | 02.20.12 |
China’s Banking System: Issues for Congress Michael F. Martin China’s banking system has been gradually transformed from a centralized, government-owned, and government-controlled provider of loans into an increasingly competitive market in which different types of banks, including several U.S. banks, strive to... |
Banking, Finance, Foreign Exchange, People’s Bank of China, Regulatory System |
| China Leadership Monitor | 01.6.12 |
Macroeconomic Policy to the Forefront: The Changing of the Guard Barry Naughton Worries continue to swirl around the Chinese and global economies, and China’s growth is slowing at the end of 2011. However, the news from China in the third quarter of 2011 was basically positive: inflationary pressures eased while growth slowed only... |
Macroeconomic Policy, Economic Growth, Global Financial Crisis |
| American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research | 11.16.11 |
Telecoms and the Huawei Conundrum Claude Barfield The Chinese company Huawei has emerged as the second-largest telecommunications equipment company in the world. It operates in 140 countries around the globe, providing equipment, software, and services to forty-five of the world’s fifty largest telecom... |
Investment, Foreign Direct Investment, Huawei |
| American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research | 11.10.11 |
Taiwan and East Asian Regionalism Claude Barfield With a population of only 23 million, Taiwan boasts a gross domestic product of $822 billion, which ranks 19th among the world’s economies. It is the fourth largest economy in Asia. Real GDP per capita increased by roughly 130 percent from 1995 when it... |
Taiwan, Investment, Trade, East Asia, Regional Politics |
| American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research | 11.3.11 |
Foreign Direct Investment, Corruption and Democracy Aparna Mathur, Kartikeya Singh How do factors such as corruption perception and the level of democracy influence foreign direct investment to developing economies? The authors of this paper suggest that less corrupt countries and less democratic countries receive more foreign direct... |
Corruption, U.S.-China Relations, Democracy, Foreign Direct Investment |