Dan Steinbock, Founder, Difference Group
Jul 24, 2012
Despite prophecies of gloom and doom, China is moving toward rebound – through stimulus lite.
Michael Spence, Chairman, Commission on Growth and Development
May 22, 2012
China and the United States are in the grip of major structural changes that both dread will end the Halcyon era when China produced low-cost goods and the US b
He Weiwen, Senior Fellow, Center for China and Globalization, CCG
May 10, 2012
China’s State Council’s approval of the Wenzhou Comprehensive Financial Reform pilot zone on March 28 marks a breakthrough in both private lending and private
Xu Mingqi, Deputy Director, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences
Apr 28, 2012
During the BRICS Summit in New Delhi on April 8 2012, the leaders of the five developing countries agreed to “enhance intra-BRICS trade” and agreed on an acco
Yu Nanping, Professor, East China Normal University
Apr 10, 2012
For the purpose of curbing the excessive rise of housing prices, the Chinese government came forward in 2010 with a series of macro regulation and control measu
Eve Cary, Researcher, Brookings Institution
Apr 06, 2012
Ever since fiscal decentralization in 1994, local governments have been saddled with a smaller slice of the revenue pie and a bigger slice of the expenditure pi
Xu Mingqi, Deputy Director, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences
Apr 04, 2012
The Chinese economy continues to be a hot topic in international media forums as its export growth rate starts to decline due to the dark economic clouds hangin
He Weiwen, Senior Fellow, Center for China and Globalization, CCG
Mar 01, 2012
China-US trade in 2010 and 2011, when the world economy experienced a hard, vulnerable recovery from global financial crisis in 2009, witnessed solid job creati
Philip Levy, Resident Scholar, American Enterprise Institute
Feb 25, 2012
Philip Levy explains how elections and political transitions in the United States and China this year ratchet up the pressure on leaders and aspirants and make conciliation more difficult.
Stephen Roach, Senior Fellow, Yale University
Feb 05, 2012
Today, fears are growing that China and India are about to be the next victims of the ongoing global economic carnage. This would have enormous consequences. As