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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy in China
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Managing India's trade deficit with large trading partners: lessons and prospects
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014India’s trade deficit with China, South Korea and Indonesia has widened considerably in recent period and is becoming unsustainable. Together, these countries accounted for 24 percent of India’s overall trade deficit in 2007 that has increased to 29 percent in 2012.DocumentThe separate environmental tax for China: a scheme design and its implementation
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2011Construction of Chinese environmental taxation system could greatly promote establishment of an intensive style economic development mode and a sustainable consumption manner, and could provide policy guarantee for an eco-civilisation and environmentally friendly society.DocumentEmpirical experiences of green national accounting in China
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2007The severity of the environmental problem in China is not only reflected by the increasing amount of pollution, the widening range of ecological destructionand the striking conflict between supply and demand of resources, but also represented by the interaction among resources, environment and social economic development.DocumentExploring and developing environmental economic policies for China in the new era
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2010The environmental economic policies are mechanisms and regimes that regulate and influence people’s behaviors of making or eliminating pollution and ecological degradation aiming at socio-economic sustainable development by employing such economic leverages as financing, taxation, pricing, credit, investment, and market instruments based on the theories of environmental economics and markDocumentStudy on optimization for central financial special fund of environmental protection
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2010The central special fund of environmental protection is the main channel for the central government to make financial input into the environmental protection in China, which plays an important role in leading the environmental investment of local finance, enterprises and society.DocumentThe design on China's carbon tax policy to mitigate climate change
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning, 2010Carbon tax was an effective policy tool to cope with the climate change and promote energy saving and emission reduction. A Computable General Equilibrium Model was set up to simulate the influence of levy carbon tax on China's macro-economy, energy saving and CO2 emission reduction. The results suggest that low rate carbon tax was a feasible option in China's near future.DocumentEconomic impact analysis on China’s environmental tax reform through a static computable general equilibrium analysis
2012Relative shortage of resources and limited environmental capacity have become the new basic characteristics of China’s national conditions, whereas China’s economic aggregate would continue to expand and the resources environment pressure would continue to increase.DocumentBCIM economic cooperation: prospects and challenges
Centre for Policy Dialogue, Bangladesh, 2007This study is an attempt to explore the potentials for expanding trade and investment under the ambit of sub-regional cooperation comprising four contiguous countries of Eastern South Asia, which includes the two fast growing economies – India and China, and the two developing economies – Bangladesh and Myanmar (BCIM).DocumentRecent developments in Myanmar: opportunities for sub-regional energy cooperation
Centre for Policy Dialogue, Bangladesh, 2014In the context of the political and economic changes that have marked Myanmar since 2010, this paper assesses the opportunities for sub-regional energy cooperation between four countries: Bangladesh, China, India and Myanmar, with Myanmar as a node.DocumentChina's manufacturing success: lessons for India
Institute of Economic Growth, India, 2014For India to achieve its stated goals of reviving its manufacturing sector and providing jobs to the tens of millions of its unemployed youth, it must design policies targeted at low cost mass manufacturing, and will need massive investment, including major contributions from foreign investors. There are crucial lessons for India in China's success in the manufacturing sector.Pages
