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Keywords:
China's sovereign wealth fund with about $70 billion of the $200 billion in the fund allocated for foreign investments mostly of the portfolio kind.
Grouped Articles
Chinaâs Sovereign Wealth Fund Buys Shares in Major Banks
New York Times 10/10/2011
Low-Key Politician to Take Helm of China's $500 Billion Fund
Wall Street Journal 07/01/2013
Economist 08/21/2010
Central Huijin Raises $7.94 Billion in Bond Sale
Wall Street Journal 08/26/2010
China Fund Shifts Focus From Energy
Wall Street Journal 02/19/2014
China’s CIC Gearing Up Investment in Overseas Assets
Wall Street Journal 03/29/2015
A recent IMF study points out that China's $3 trillion foreign exchange reserves are twice what China needs for traditional purposes such as supporting the economy in a financial crisis. According to China's central bank governor these reserves are making it difficult to control inflation. Experts also say this makes little sense for a developing country with low percapita incomes. Most of this money is invested in U.S. Treasury securities and is not put to productive uses.
Grouped Articles
China’s Economic Problems Unlike Those Elsewhere
New York Times 05/28/2013
China Keeps On Gobbling Up Treasurys
Wall Street Journal 07/16/2013
China Inflation Rises to a 19-Month High
New York Times 06/11/2010
A Top Manager Resigns from Foreign Exchange Agency
New York Times 01/28/2014
Wall Street Journal 08/25/2015
China’s Forex Reserves Fall by Record $93.9 Billion on Yuan Intervention
Wall Street Journal 09/08/2015
Wage increases of 20% at Hon Hai and upto 100% at Honda factories in China from wages that were kept low for the export market, are now the trend in China. The government policy is shifting to encourage such wage increases to promote domestic consumption and reduce an overreliance on export markets for growth. This is happening just as trade tensions are increasing with the USA.
Grouped Articles
Beijing Signals a Shift on Economic Policy
New York Times 05/24/2013
Honda's Long-Haul Dilemma in China
Wall Street Journal 06/24/2010
Interview With Japan Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada
Wall Street Journal 09/02/2010
Yuan's Rise Hurts China's Exporters
Wall Street Journal 01/20/2014
China Will Keep Growing. Just Ask the Soviets.
New York Times 10/24/2014
Adidos and Hotwind? In China, Brands Evoke Foreign Names, Even if They’re Gibberish
New York Times 12/26/2014
Trade between the USA and China and currency issues. Obama administration's efforts to address currency issues and fair trade issues with other countries.
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 10/04/2011
Europeâs Debt Crisis Is Casting a Shadow Over China
New York Times 05/17/2010
The Long View of Changes in Chinaâs Currency
New York Times 09/21/2010
An Accord (and Lessons) to Remember
Wall Street Journal 09/21/2010
US-China trade relations: Speak less softly, carry a stick
Economist 09/25/2010
Obama Promotes Benefits of Trade Deals to Workers and Smaller Businesses
New York Times 02/26/2015
'Rebalancing' is the idea that China will consumer more US goods and export less to the US, reducing the lopsided trade imbalance between the two countries. China's government continues its focus on exports and infrastructure in 2009-2011. China's banking system focusses on lending to state-owned companies and the system does not have the attitude, incentives or the mechanisms and experience to increase lending to consumers or small business. Experts say rebalancing is doubtful without serious changes in the banking system and government policy which are not likely.
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 07/15/2013
New York Times 12/18/2011
Economist 03/31/2010
Fixing a Perception Gap for the Underappreciated G-20
Wall Street Journal 08/27/2013
US-China trade relations: Speak less softly, carry a stick
Economist 09/25/2010
Adidos and Hotwind? In China, Brands Evoke Foreign Names, Even if They’re Gibberish
New York Times 12/26/2014
American action against products from China that are dumped on the U.S. market. The unervalued Chinese currency and subsidized exports.
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 10/04/2011
Economist 03/31/2010
Europeâs Debt Crisis Is Casting a Shadow Over China
New York Times 05/17/2010
How China Lost Its Mojo: One Town's Story
Wall Street Journal 09/16/2013
An Accord (and Lessons) to Remember
Wall Street Journal 09/21/2010
US-China trade relations: Speak less softly, carry a stick
Economist 09/25/2010
SAFE, or State Administration of Foreign Exchange, is a division of China's central bank.
Grouped Articles
China's Zhu Changhong Helps Steer Nation's Currency Reserves
Wall Street Journal 07/16/2013
China Keeps On Gobbling Up Treasurys
Wall Street Journal 07/16/2013
A Top Manager Resigns from Foreign Exchange Agency
New York Times 01/28/2014
Wall Street Journal 08/25/2015
Pressure Grows on China to Spur Domestic Consumption
Wall Street Journal 08/07/2011
China's Forex Reserves Decline
Wall Street Journal 01/14/2012
Grouped Articles
Brawny Yuan Stands Apart from the Crowd
Wall Street Journal 12/10/2013
Yuan Faces International Trade Headwinds
Wall Street Journal 03/25/2015
Wall Street Journal 09/01/2015
IMF Lifts Chinese Yuan to Elite Lending-Reserve Currency Status
Wall Street Journal 11/30/2015
China Steps Up, but Its Currency Still Has Dues to Pay
New York Times 12/05/2015
China Stumbles in Yuan Grand Plan
Wall Street Journal 07/15/2011
Every $1 increase in oil prices reduces China's trade deficit by $1.9 billion, according to one estimate. China had a trade deficit in February 2011. This reduces the pressures on the yuan. See the IMF forecast on China's shrinking trade surplus in 2011-2014.
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 10/04/2011
China Logs Surprise Trade Deficit
Wall Street Journal 03/10/2011
China’s $3 trillion dilemma: What to do with all that cash? - The Washington Post
Washington Post 04/19/2011
No Appreciation for the Rising Yuan
Wall Street Journal 06/21/2011
Pressure Grows on China to Spur Domestic Consumption
Wall Street Journal 08/07/2011
Tallying the Toll of U.S.-China Trade
Wall Street Journal 09/27/2011
Peter Morici of the University of Maryland and others express their view in 2009 on what needs to happen. The dollar Morici says needs to be devalued 40-50% against the yuan. He says that while China talks about an alternative reserve currency, it is part of the problem. And the crisis was caused by the U.S. demand that was inflated by the cheap yuan and then collapsed, says Morici.
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 10/04/2011
Europeâs Debt Crisis Is Casting a Shadow Over China
New York Times 05/17/2010
An Accord (and Lessons) to Remember
Wall Street Journal 09/21/2010
Cheaper Chinese Currency Has Global Impact
Wall Street Journal 08/12/2015
China Takes a Smoother Path to Currency Devaluation
Wall Street Journal 11/25/2015
Peter Morici: Behind the Dollar's Dog Days
BusinessWeek 10/15/2009
Grouped Articles
The Canton Fair: The China price
Economist 05/23/2011
Pressure Grows on China to Spur Domestic Consumption
Wall Street Journal 08/07/2011
Buck Up, America: China Is Getting Too Expensive
Wall Street Journal 10/07/2011
U.S. Shoppers Foot Bill for Soaring Pay in China
Wall Street Journal 12/15/2011
China Speeds Economic 'Transformation'
Wall Street Journal 03/06/2012
China's Vanishing Trade Imbalance
New York Times 05/01/2012
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