| Organization | Date | Title | Keywords |
|---|---|---|---|
| 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 |
| Council on Foreign Relations | 11.1.11 |
Internationalizing the Renminbi and China’s Financial Development Model Robert N. McCauley Internationalization was a spontaneous outcome of the marketplace for the rest of the world’s major currencies, but China is breaking with history by making it official policy to steer the renminbi on a path toward reserve currency status. However, this... |
Finance, Renminbi, Currency |
| Council on Foreign Relations | 11.1.11 |
Historical Precedents for Internationalization of the RMB Jeffrey Frankel The twentieth century saw the rise of the US dollar, the German mark, and the Japanese yen as international currencies. Now the Chinese renminbi is on a similar course toward reserve currency status, but its path is deviating from those of its... |
Renminbi, Currency, Economic Development |
| Council on Foreign Relations | 11.1.11 |
The Future of International Liquidity and the Role of China Alan M. Taylor Financial crises in the 1930s and 1970s showed the world that economic instability results when demand for international liquidity allows a small number of countries to run up massive debts in their own currencies. Named for the economist who first... |
Currency, Renminbi, Financial Crisis, Debt |
| Council on Foreign Relations | 11.1.11 |
The Internationalization of the RMB: Opportunities and Pitfalls Tatatoshi Ito China is making swift strides toward internationalizing its currency, the renminbi, but it must be careful when sequencing these changes. Without the proper reforms, wide-open Chinese financial markets would be vulnerable to massive flows of foreign... |
Renminbi, Foreign Direct Investment, Economic Development |
| Council on Foreign Relations | 11.1.11 |
What Drives CNH Market Equilibrium? Peter Garber The recent rapid growth of the offshore renminbi market presents a puzzle for analysts of China's development strategy. By allowing renminbi to flow offshore uncontrolled before loosening government controls over internal financial markets, Chinese... |
Renminbi, Economic Development |
| BSR | 11.1.11 |
Catalyzing Social Investment in China Brooke Avory, Adam Lane In May 2008, an earthquake hit the western Chinese province of Sichuan, taking 80,000 lives and displacing millions of others. The earthquake inspired an increase in donations from RMB13.3 billion in 2007 to RMB76.4 billion in 2008 and highlighted... |
Philanthropy, Government Transparency, Non-Profit Sector |
| Congressional Research Service | 10.25.11 |
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Meetings in Honolulu: A Preview Michael F. Martin The United States will host the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation’s (APEC’s) 19th Economic Leaders’ Meeting in Honolulu, HI, on November 12 & 13, 2011. APEC was founded in 1989 to facilitate trade and investment liberalization in the Asia-Pacific... |
APEC, Trade, Trans-Pacific Partnership |