Qi Jingmei, Researcher, State Information Center
Mar 08, 2013
Thanks to the central government’s stabilization policies, Chinese enterprises have accelerated production to make up the inventory rather than slowing down production to digest the inventory. The macroeconomic operation will continue the rising trend and China’s GDP growth in 2013 may be faster than 2012.
He Weiwen, Senior Fellow, Center for China and Globalization, CCG
Dec 13, 2012
While avoiding the label of “currency manipulator,” China’s currency, the renminbi, continues to face criticism by the US Treasury Department for being “significantly undervalued.” Now, an analysis of global trade data seeks to end the correlation between trade surplus and currency exchange rates.
Ma Jun, Research Fellow, PLA Academy of Military Science
Jun 15, 2012
Recently, there has been an increasing call from the global sphere for the Chinese government to faster globalization of the RMB, since stronger economic growth in China can also help pull the rest of the world out of its current financial slump. The next question comes to whether China is ready for the challenge in next five to ten years.
Dan Steinbock, Founder, Difference Group
May 25, 2012
Recently, the U.S.-Chinese Strategic & Economic Dialogue (S&ED) was overshadowed by international politics, rapid escalation of challenges in the Eurozone, and
Stephen Roach, Senior Fellow, Yale University
May 02, 2012
For too long, the United States has allowed its fixation on the renminbi’s exchange rate to deflect attention from far more important issues in its economic relationship with China. For a growth-starved US, the opportunities for access to China’s markets far outweigh the currency threat.
Brahma Chellaney, Professor, Center for Policy Research
Apr 04, 2012
As it prepares to hold its latest annual summit in New Delhi on March 28-29, the BRICS grouping – Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa – remains a c
Feb 29, 2012
Since the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the ensuing tsunami from Wall Street that almost swamped the financial world in 2008, China has been busy signing bila
Zhou Shijian, Senior Fellow, Tsinghua Center for US-China Relations
Feb 29, 2012
Recently, the Wall Street Journal carried an article entitled, “How Much Harm Chinese Goods Can Do to America?”, relating three American researchers’ assumpt
Daniel McDowell, Assistant Professor, Syracuse University
Feb 01, 2012
Nobel laureate Robert Mundell once stated that “great powers have great currencies.” Few geopolitical observers today would deny that China has now achieved
Yu Yongding, Former President, China Society of World Economics
Jan 30, 2012
The core of internationalization of the Chinese yuan, or renminbi, is liberalization of its capital account, as was revealed in China’s practices over the past