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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy in China
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Liberalising China's capital account: lessons drawn from Thailand's experience
East Asian Regional Network, Global Development Network, 2000This article explores how China might choose to liberalise its capital account. The article emphasises the importance of nuanced and careful removal of capital restriction, allowing for quicker/radical removal of restrictions in some cases and slower/gradual removal in other cases.DocumentRacing to the bottom?: foreign investment and air quality in developing countries
New Ideas in Pollution Regulation, World Bank, 2000This article looks at whether globalisation could trigger an environmental "race to the bottom", in which competition for investment and jobs relentlessly degrade environmental standards. The "race to the bottom" theory is tested by examining firstly, air quality data in industrialised countries and selected developing countries (China, Mexico, Brazil).DocumentOutflows of capital from China
OECD Development Centre, 1997While the world has been mesmerised by China’s emergence as a major player in international trade, now being one of the world’s top ten traders, and also as an absorber of international capital (second only to the United States), China’s state-owned and other public sector enterprises have been quietly growing in importance as a source of international capital.DocumentMultinational versus expatriate FDI: a comparative analysis of the Chinese and Indian experiences
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations, 2000This paper offers estimated econometric models of FDI inflows into both China and India, making a distinction between multinational versus expatriate investments and provides statistics and analysis for both countries.Findings include:FDI inflow into India in 1997-98 totaled $3.2 billion as against the 1997 Chinese aggregate of almost $39 billionin both countries, investment by largPages
