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US - CHINA ECONOMIC RELATIONS (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   129642


Chinese direct investment in the EU and the US: a comparative view / Hanemann, Thilo   Journal Article
Hanemann, Thilo Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Chinese outward foreign direct investment (OFDI) in developed economies has increased substantially in recent years, driven by policy liberalization and structural adjustments in China's economy. Efforts to accurately describe the dimensions of this increase are complicated by problems with official statistics and the complexity of deal structures. This article introduces the major problems of capturing data on global cross-border investment flows and elaborates on the particular difficulties of measuring Chinese outward FDI. It identifies alternative datasets that can help to better capture the scope and patterns of the Chinese overseas investment and uses one of them to describe the growth of Chinese investment in the EU and the US since 2000, highlighting similarities and differences in investment patterns in the world's two biggest economies.
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2
ID:   153677


Economic rise of China: rule-taker, rule-maker, or rule-breaker? / Wang, Zhaohui   Journal Article
Wang, Zhaohui Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper examines the symbiotic but asymmetric relationship between the United States as the core and China as the semi-periphery. It argues that China’s policy response in both domestic and international domains after the global financial crisis reveals that China as a rising power is no longer a rule-taker, but between a rule-maker and a rule-breaker that adds incremental reforms to current international institutions.
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3
ID:   127055


End of the 'liberal theory of history': dissecting the US congress' discourse on China's currency policy / Nymalm, Nicola   Journal Article
Nymalm, Nicola Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Over the last 10 years, economic issues related to currency policy have become the major ongoing dispute between China and the United States. Specifically, the US Congress has demanded a tougher policy to avert the negative consequences of "unfair" Chinese policies-in the form of a "manipulated currency"-for the US economy. Building on an analytical framework of discourse theory (DT)-and proposing a method for applying DT in empirical research-an investigation into congressional debates on the Chinese currency shows that the question is not a purely economic one, but rather that it reflects a dislocation of US identity as the vanguard of liberal-democratic capitalism. This dislocation involves changes to how "liberal" identity in the US Congress is articulated in relation to the role attributed to "illiberal" China, which in turn affects the formulation of US China policy in Congress.
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4
ID:   172084


Partial disengagement: a new US strategy for economic competition with China / Friedberg, Aaron L; Boustany, Charles W   Journal Article
Friedberg, Aaron L Journal Article
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