Ebook: China’s Emerging Financial Markets: Challenges and Opportunities
- Tags: Finance /Banking, Public Finance & Economics, International Economics, Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics, Social Policy
- Series: The Milken Institute Series on Financial Innovation and Economic Growth 8
- Year: 2009
- Publisher: Springer US
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- pdf
China’s rapid pace of economic growth and development is accompanied by needed reforms in its emerging financial markets. The government’s measured approach in developing these markets is creating unusual challenges and opportunities, both domestically and internationally.
This book offers one of the most insightful up-to-date looks available at the evolving Chinese financial system. It provides alternative perspectives of the system’s evolution and its potential contribution to economic growth. The book also discusses financial institutions as well as the bond, equity, and real estate markets, focusing on the ways in which governmental policies are affecting their performance.
China’s Emerging Financial Markets: Challenges and Opportunities presents an in-depth assessment of such important issues as the performance and lending patterns of China’s banks, as well as an assessment of real estate property prices. Significant attention is also paid to the important role that globalization is having on China’s exchange rate and monetary policies.
This book is the eighth in the Milken Institute Series on Financial Innovation and Economic Growth, and brings together the ideas of forty-one widely recognized financial and policy experts. Notably, more than half of the contributors are Chinese and have the advantage of front-row seats in China’s emerging financial markets.
Within the past three decades China has undergone tremendous structural changes in its economy. The Editors discuss the recent and ongoing reforms in China’s financial system and their role in the world economy. China’s GDP has grown almost three times the world average; now only behind the United States, Japan and Germany. The focus of this book is to examine, in detail, China’s changing financial system in order to assess whether it can catch up with, or even drive economic growth.