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China in Global Finance [electronic resource] : Domestic Financial Repression and International Financial Power by Heep, Sandra

Book Information

TitleChina in Global Finance [electronic resource] : Domestic Financial Repression and International Financial Power
CreatorHeep, Sandra, SpringerLink (Online service)
Year2014
PPI600
PublisherSpringer International Publishing
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
SubjectEconomics, International economic relations, Finance, Economics/Management Science, Emerging Markets/Globalization, Economics, Finance/Investment/Banking, International relations, Financial Economics, International economic relations
ISBN9783319024660, 3319024663
Collectionfolkscanomy_miscellaneous, folkscanomy, additional_collections
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Identifierspringer_10.1007-978-3-319-02466-0
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China in Global Finance: Domestic Financial Repression and International Financial PowerAuthor: Sandra Heep Published by Springer International Publishing ISBN: 978-3-319-02465-3 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-02466-0Table of Contents:Introduction Financial Power and the Developmental State Financial Repression and Structural Financial Power Financial Repression and Currency Internationalization Financial Repression and Relational Financial Power Developmental States in the Bretton Woods Institutions Conclusion, 1 Introduction -- 2 Financial Power and the Developmental State -- 3 Financial Repression and Structural Financial Power -- 4 Financial Repression and Currency Internationalization -- 5 Financial Repression and Relational Financial Power -- 6 Developmental States in the Bretton Woods Institutions -- 7 Conclusion, Against the backdrop of Chinas increasingly influential role in the international financial architecture, this book seeks to characterize and evaluate Chinas financial power potential. It does so by analyzing the relationship between domestic financial repression and international financial power in the context of the political economy of the developmental state. On the basis of a novel theoretical framework for the analysis of the financial power potential of developmental states, the book provides an in-depth analysis of Chinas approach to currency internationalization, its creditor status and its policies towards the Bretton Woods institutions while contrasting the countrys present role in global finance with the position of the Japanese developmental state in the 1980s and 1990s