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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy, Domestic finance in China
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Explaining low employment rates among older women in urban China
Institute for Fiscal Studies, London, 2017In China, the employment rate among middle-aged and older urban residents is exceptionally low. For example, 27% of 55-64-year-old urban women were in work in 2013, compared to more than 50% in UK, Thailand and Philippines.DocumentOld-Age pension and extended families: how is adult children's internal migration affected?
Institute of Labor Economics, Bonn, 2016Old-age pension programs targeting the elderly may eventually benefit their extended families. However, no consensus has been reached on the growing body of literature that examines the potential impact of old-age pension on migration decisions of extended families.DocumentThe impact of fiscal subsidy on China's new rural pension system: a natural experiment
AgEcon Search, 2016The China’s New Rural Pension Scheme (NRPS) has rapidly expanded since its first implementation in 2009,and has covered all counties of China since 2012. This paper studied the impact of fiscal subsidies on the participation rate and contributions of the rural resideDocumentChina's economic slowdown: assessment and implications for Africa
Centre for Chinese Studies, University of Stellenbosch, 2016Three decades of average double digit growth has helped propel China into the world’s second largest economy with global economies increasingly reliant on China to drive economic growth.DocumentDemographic change and fiscal sustainability in Asia
Economic Growth Centre, Nanyang Technical University, 2016Changes in the population age structure can have a significant effect on fiscal sustainability since they can affect both government revenues and expenditures. For example, population ageing will increase expenditures on the elderly while reducing potential growth and hence revenues.DocumentThe Republic of Korea's economic growth and catch-Up: implications for the People's Republic of China
Asian Development Bank Institute, 2016This study investigates the economic growth and catch-up of the Republic of Korea over the past half-century.DocumentNo country for old men: an investment motive for downward inter-generational transfers in rural China
AgEcon Search, 2016Tens of millions of older Chinese have been struggling with poverty and loneliness as their children flee villages to cities. Sharp demographic changes such as rapid aging and increasing dependency ratio due to the one-child policy, as well as the recent trend of rural-to-urban migration as a result of urbanisationDocumentRelocating China's foreign reserves
School of Public Policy and Management of Tsinghua University, 2016The present global capitalism based on private property rights, free market competition and rule of law has taken shape shortly after World War II, which led to the first wave of contemporary international economic integration.DocumentUnderstanding China’s approaches to international development
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2014China’s impressive economic growth and increasing development activities overseas, particularly in the African continent, have spurred intense debate and criticism over its role as a rising power in international development. China is viewed in the West both as a threat, but also as a valuable potential partner in development cooperation.DocumentChina's WTO entry: effects on its economy and implications for the Philippines
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 2004The Philippines’ bilateral trade with China has increased steadily since China adopted the open door policy in late 1979. The growth has been particularly rapid in the nineties when Chinafocused its liberalisation on foreign trade.Pages
