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MCCAULEY, ROBERT N (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   130971


Global and Euro imbalances: China and Germany / Ma, Guonan; McCauley, Robert N   Journal Article
Ma, Guonan Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract We analyze global and euro area imbalances by focusing on China and Germany as large surplus and creditor countries. In the 2000s, domestic reforms expanded the effective labor force, restrained wages, shifted income toward profits and increased corporate saving. As a result, the Chinese and German current account surpluses widened, and that of Germany has proven more persistent, with subdued domestic investment. China is an early-stage creditor, holding a short equity position and a long position in safe debt. Germany's balanced net debt and equity claims mark it as a mature creditor that provides insurance to the rest of the world. China pays to lay off equity risk, while Germany, by contrast, harvests a moderate yield on its net claims. In both economies, the shortfall of the net international investment position from cumulated current account surpluses arises from exchange rate changes, asymmetric valuation gains, and, in Germany's case, credit losses.
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ID:   120839


Renminbi internationalisation and China’s financial development / McCauley, Robert N   Journal Article
McCauley, Robert N Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract There is a widespread view that China's currency can be used in international markets only after the liberalisation of China's domestic financial markets and the opening of its capital account. Yet evidently the renminbi's internationalisation is preceding these so-called preconditions. This article assesses the tensions inherent in renminbi internationalisation starting at a transitional period in China's financial development. For now, effective capital controls allow the Chinese authorities to retain regulated deposit and lending rates, quantitative credit guidance and bond market rationing. Relaxation of the capital controls would put these policies at risk. Reserve requirements can be extended to bank inflows from the offshore market but only at a price.
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