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This book examines China's response to the Asian financial crisis of 1997, both in its immediate aftermath and in the years since. Based on research conducted by the China Development Research Foundation, one of China's leading think-tanks, this book includes contributions from senior policy makers in the Chinese government.
List of contents
Part 1: China's Macroeconomic Management after the Asian Financial Crisis 1. From Overcoming Deflation to Preventing Inflation
Liu He 2. From Proactive to Sound Fiscal Policy: An Improvement to China's Public Finance System
Jia Kang 3. Renminbi Exchange Rates and Relevant Institutional Factors
Yi Gang 4. China's Policy of Opening Up in the Decade After the Asian Financial Crisis
Long Guoqiang Part 2: China's Financial System and Reform of State-owned Enterprises after the Asian Financial Crisis 5. Reform of State-owned Commercial Banks: From Disposing of Non-performing Assets to Institutional Reform
Liu Chunhang 6. System Reform of China's Capital Market
Qi Bin and Huang Ming 7. Reform of State-owned Enterprises: A Three-Year Disconnect from Difficulties Leads to System Innovation
Zhang Delin 8. China's Rural Reform and Development after the Asian Financial Crisis
Han Jun Part 3: Restructuring China's Social Welfare System 9. Proactive Employment Policy and Labour Market Development
Cai Fang & Wang Meiyan 10. Social Security Policy
Wang Yanzhong 11. Reform and Development of the Public Health System
Zhang Zhenzhong and Wu Huazhang 12. Educational Policies: From Expansion and Equity to Quality
Zhang Li Part 4: Reflections on the Asian Financial Crisis and China's Opening up to the Outside 13. The 1997 Asian Financial Crisis: Review and Reflections
Bai Chong-En 14. China in the Realm of the World Economy
Li Daokui
About the author
Wang Mengkui is former President of the Development Research Center of the State Council, and is currently Chairman of the China Development Research Foundation.
Summary
This book examines China’s response to the Asian financial crisis of 1997, both in its immediate aftermath and in the years since. The crisis caused turmoil throughout Asia’s economies, and precipitated wholesale reform of economic and financial policies and institutions across the region. As one of Asia’s largest economies, China responded to the crisis more successfully than many others, avoiding devaluation of its currency, whilst undertaking financial reform, restructuring state-owned enterprises, rural development, and social security systems. This book considers all of these issues, showing how the lessons drawn from the crisis have helped shape China’s policies of liberalisation and market-orientated reform, including its attitude towards globalisation and the outside world in general. Based on research conducted by the China Development Research Foundation, one of China’s leading think-tanks, this book includes contributions from senior policy makers in the Chinese government and some experts participating directly in the government’s policy-making process to assess the effects generated by the country’s related policies, making it an indispensable account of China’s own thinking on its response to the financial crisis.