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China's Superbank

Debt, Oil and Influence - How China Development Bank is Rewriting the Rules of Finance
BuchGebunden
864 Seiten
Englisch
Wiley & Sonserschienen am04.01.20131. Auflage
Outlines how the China Development Bank (CDB) is at the center of China's domestic economic growth and how it is helping to expand China's influence in strategically important overseas markets. In this title, the CDB holds the key to understanding the inner workings of China's state-led economic development model, and its most glaring flaws.mehr
Verfügbare Formate
BuchGebunden
EUR64,00
E-BookEPUB2 - DRM Adobe / EPUBE-Book
EUR37,99
E-BookPDF2 - DRM Adobe / Adobe Ebook ReaderE-Book
EUR37,99

Produkt

KlappentextOutlines how the China Development Bank (CDB) is at the center of China's domestic economic growth and how it is helping to expand China's influence in strategically important overseas markets. In this title, the CDB holds the key to understanding the inner workings of China's state-led economic development model, and its most glaring flaws.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-1-118-17636-8
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
Erscheinungsjahr2013
Erscheinungsdatum04.01.2013
Auflage1. Auflage
Seiten864 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Gewicht554 g
Artikel-Nr.18248142
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Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface ix Acknowledgments xix Chapter 1 Let 10,000 Projects Bloom 1 The Wuhu Model 4 The Chongqing Model 9 Global Financial Crisis 12 A Town Called Loudi 15 Li´s Story 18 Manhattan in China 21 Credit Risk in a One-Party State 26 Cracks in the System 29 Chapter 2 Turning a Zombie Bank into a Global Bank 39 A Life in the Party 41 The Princeling Party: The Beginning of State Capitalism 50 Taking Over a Basket Case 55 Transforming CDB from an ATM Machine 58 Developing a Slogan 62 Beating the Commercial Banks 64 Gao Jian: Creating a Market for Risk-Free Bonds 68 The West Self-Destructs: The Financial Crisis 72 Moving Beyond Wall Street 75 Chapter 3 Nothing to Lose but Our Chains: China Development Bank in Africa 85 Made in Ethiopia 90 Ethiopia´s Zone: Exporting to the West 94 China Africa Development Fund: The State´s Private Equity Arm 96 Rising Role of China in Africa 101 Fixed Capital: Western-Style Lending 105 African Tiger: Can Ghana Escape the Resource Curse? 108 Fresh Capital 116 Chapter 4 Risk versus Reward: China Development Bank in Venezuela 123 Default in Bolívar´s Country 125 China´s Venezuelan Adventure 126 Loans for Oil 132 Cars, Housing, and Gold: Good Business for China 136 Ecuador 139 Russia 140 China in the Backyard of the United States 141 Chapter 5 Funding the New Economy 147 Obama´s Dream 151 Default-Free Bond Market 153 Financing China´s Global Company: Huawei 157 The Final Frontier: Private Equity 163 Acting as a Gatekeeper 167 Imprint of the State 169 Chapter 6 The Future 175 About the Authors 181 Index 183mehr
Kritik
"Compelling read" -- The Wall Street Journal "The book is another useful insight into the workings of the Chinese state apparatus to come out of the Bloomberg bureau in Beijing -- in July it printed an expose about the family finances of Xi Jinping, and its website has been blocked since. One of the most striking aspects of the CDB story is how the bank managed to balance being a state-owned company with maintaining sufficient independence to function as a commercial business." -- Irish Times "Calls for reform in China tend to come in two kinds -- one, the most common in Chinese social media and popular discussion, calls for a crackdown on endemic forms of local tyranny, such as land seizures, black prisons, and bribery. The other, found among liberals within the Party and expatriate businessmen, talks about rolling back the growing dominance of the state and state-owned companies over the Chinese economy, opening more markets to competition and ending the practices that allow state-owned (or state-blessed) companies to command cheap access to capital, natural resources, and land. So far, Xi Jinping's term looks promising for advocates of the first but the book [China's Superbank: Debt, Oil and Influence -- How China Development Bank is Rewriting the Rules of Finance] makes a case that land seizures are at the very foundations of China's model of state capitalism." -- The Diplomatmehr

Autor

HENRY SANDERSON has been a reporter for Bloomberg News since April 2010. Prior to that, he was a reporter for the Associated Press in Beijing and Dow Jones in New York. While at Bloomberg, Sanderson has covered corporate finance, focusing on China's banks, the bond market, and the emergence of the yuan as an international currency. He is a graduate of the University of Leeds (with a BA in Chinese and English literature) and Columbia University (with a Master's in East Asian Studies).

MICHAEL FORSYTHE has been a reporter and editor for Bloomberg News since 2000. Prior to that, he was an officer in the U.S. Navy for seven years, serving on ships in the U.S. 7th Fleet. The highlight of his career in Washington was overseeing Bloomberg's coverage of the historic 2008 presidential election. Since returning to Beijing in 2009, Forsythe has focused on policy and politics, with particular emphasis on the international impact of "China Inc." He is a graduate of Georgetown University (with a BA in International Economics) and Harvard University (with a Master's in East Asian Regional Studies).