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FINANCIAL FUTURE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   133635


Europe's peripheral vision: France and friends are letting Germany conquer Europe / Ezrati, Milton   Journal Article
Ezrati, Milton Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract IT'S TOO SOON to pop the champagne corks. Europe, mired in gloom for years, still faces many high hurdles to resolve its crisis. Nonetheless, there are some auguries of prosperity that might invite a stockpiling of party hats and noisemakers. In December 2013, Ireland successfully emerged from its bailout, and Portugal followed this May. This verifiable progress represented a first for members of Europe's struggling periphery. But this news should only lift spirits so high. If these financial gains make anything clear, it is the need now to go beyond budget control to more fundamental and structural economic reform. Ireland's finance minister, Michael Noonan, summed up the situation well, characterizing his nation's emergence from the bailout as a "milestone," not the "end of the road." To secure their economic and financial future, Ireland, Portugal, the rest of Europe's periphery and France (which increasingly resembles the periphery) will have to reform long-standing labor, product and tax practices, and even industrial structures, to promote rather than impede organic growth. These nations must do nothing less than reshape the political-economic models under which they have operated for decades.
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2
ID:   174407


Irreplaceable Outpost? Whither Hong Kong in China's Financial Future / Li, Yu-wai Vic   Journal Article
Li, Yu-wai Vic Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Can China turn away from using Hong Kong as its main international financial center (IFC)? This article offers a framework with an international political economy (IPE) perspective that draws on pioneering IPE research into China's growing global financial presence and monetary influence, through which an assessment is made of Hong Kong's future as a financial center in relation to the Chinese mainland. Although the social unrest in the city from the mid-2010s onward has prompted Beijing to look for alternative financial hubs in the region, Hong Kong's contributions have been hard to replace, and that will likely remain the case for the foreseeable future. The analysis concludes by outlining two potential future scenarios for Hong Kong.
Key Words China  Hong Kong  Financial Future 
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