Chinese Trade

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A01=Rich Marino
Author_Rich Marino
Category=KCBM
Category=KCL
Category=KCP
China and the West
China's Foreign Exchange Reserves
China's trade surplus
China’s Foreign Exchange Reserves
Chinese Communist Party
Chinese FDI
Chinese Government
Chinese Outbound FDI
Currency Manipulation
currency manipulation effects
economic statecraft
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
EU China
EU China Relation
EU China Trade
EU Export
EU Investment
EU Trade
European Union's Trade Deficit
European Union’s Trade Deficit
export-led growth
Foreign Direct Investment
foreign direct investment China
Gdp Growth
Gdp Growth Target
Gdp Reduction
Governenment subsidies
Granting China Market Economy Status
industrial policy analysis
International trade policies
Mao Zedong
Outbound FDI
Richard Nixon
SITC
Total EU Export
Total FDI
Total FDI Inflow
trade imbalance solutions
US exports to China
West Germany
Western market access strategies
WTO Accession Protocol

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367587833
  • Weight: 303g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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There’s no question, compared to the advanced economies China’s economic growth rates have been spectacular, but in most instances the economic analysts tend to forget that a large part of China’s growth has been dictated by government industrial subsidies. How did China go from a bit player overnight to the largest exporter in the world in capital-intensive industries?

This book shows that government subsidies play a big part in China’s success. Government subsidies include those to basic industries: energy (coal, electricity, natural gas and heavy oil), steel, glass, paper, auto parts, solar and more. A lot has been written about China’s trade practices with the West, but none of this work addresses the real unsustainable dilemma. Much of the current literature discusses the problems but doesn’t explain the root cause of China’s lopsided trade practices with the West or explain in detail how China finances its government subsidies, with nothing written that explains that China’s subsidized exports to the United States and European Union are basically self-funded by its enormous trade surplus with the West. A trade surplus represents a net inflow of domestic currency from foreign markets and is the opposite of a trade deficit, which would represent a net outflow. Moreover, this is the only book that describes China’s current trade practices with the West as a zero sum game at the expense of the West.

This book provides two solutions to this endless quagmire: an increase in Western exports to China so that China and the West have more of an equal trade balance, or a very steep reduction of China’s exports to the West.

Rich Marino is the former Senior Vice-President of Morgan Stanley, USA. After leaving Morgan Stanely, he completed an MSc (Research) in Economic History at the London School of Economics, UK, and he became an established economics author, publishing Submerging Markets (2013) and The Future BRICS (2015).

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