Details

National Finance


National Finance

A Chinese Perspective

von: Yunxian Chen

117,69 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 23.04.2021
ISBN/EAN: 9789813360921
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

“National finance” is a new concept launched by the author in his&nbsp;book <i>National Finance ─ A Chinese Perspective</i>, a unique monograph&nbsp;that differs from other financial publications dealing with general topics&nbsp;in public finance. The monograph intends to provide a full,&nbsp;well-developed and macro-level exposition of all major aspects of finance&nbsp;from the perspective of the central government, with focus laid on the&nbsp;most essential, immediate and intricate issues in national financial&nbsp;development, which are the "hard nuts" that have to be cracked on both&nbsp;central and regional levels and on the fronts of both offshore and onshore&nbsp;finance. It attempts to cope with a series of formidable challenges that a&nbsp;country, particularly its top government officials, must take in developing&nbsp;finance: how national finance should develop and overtake in the face of&nbsp;rising financial industries, how it should respond to the influx of&nbsp;AI+blockchain technologies, how a country guards against and copes&nbsp;with systematic or regional financial risks with security, fluidity and&nbsp;profitability serving as its cornerstones, how it can build up and promote&nbsp;the new international financial system and governance amid international&nbsp;financial powers around the world, and so on.&nbsp;<br>
Foreword&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>Chapter One The concept of “big finance” and the national policy of&nbsp;</div><div>a strong RMB — A policy study of the top-level design and layout of&nbsp;</div><div>Chinese finance&nbsp;</div><div>1.1 The positioning of the modern financial system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.1.1 An overview of the modern financial system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.1.2 The two types of world financial systems&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.2 The structure of the modern financial system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.2.1 The financial market system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.2.2 The financial organization system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.2.3 The financial legal system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.2.4 The financial regulation system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>1.2.5 The financial environment system&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>1.2.6 The financial infrastructure&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.3 Policies for the modern financial system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.3.1 Financial policies&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.3.2 The monetary policy&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.3.3 The exchange rate policy&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.3.4 The regulatory policy&nbsp;</div><div>1.4 The development of a modern financial system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.4.1 The currency area&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.4.2 The “national policy” of a strong U.S. dollar&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.4.3 The national policy of a strong RMB&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>1.5 The establishment of an organization for the top-level layout of&nbsp;</div><div>China's finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>Chapter Two The “twin-peak” model for financial regulation — A&nbsp;</div><div>review of financial regulatory and coordinating measures in China&nbsp;</div><div>2.1 The financial regulation system in America&nbsp;</div><div>2.2 The U.K. financial regulation system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>2.3 The financial regulation system in the EU&nbsp;</div><div>2.4 Differences and similarities in financial regulation schemes&nbsp;</div><div>2.5 Selection of modes of financial regulation in China&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>2.5.1 The “twin-peak” mode of financial regulation&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>2.5.2 Top-level decision-making body&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>2.5.3 Interaction of financial regulation policies&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>2.5.4 Regulation of systematically important financial institutions&nbsp;</div><div>2.5.5 International cooperation in financial regulation&nbsp;</div><div><div>Chapter Three Local economic development and financial support —&nbsp;</div><div>A study of Chinese financial hierarchy&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>3.1 Financial liberalization and national instability&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>3.2 Financial repression and regional lack of vitality&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>3.2.1 Financial development — a choice for regional economic transition&nbsp;</div><div>3.2.2 Eight types of competition in local economy&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>3.2.3 Local economic development requires financial underpinning&nbsp;</div><div>3.2.4 Stronger measures are needed to release financial repression&nbsp;</div>3.3 Definition of central and local responsibilities and authorities&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>3.3.1 Overall thinking and basic principles&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>3.3.2 Definition of authorities and responsibilities of central and local&nbsp;</div><div>governments for financial regulation&nbsp;</div><div>3.3.3 Central and local financial regulatory structure&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>3.4 Measures for effectively promoting local financial development&nbsp;</div><div>Chapter Four The establishment of an onshore transaction clearing&nbsp;</div><div>center for RMB offshore business — Explorations in the interactive&nbsp;</div><div>model for internal and external finance&nbsp;</div><div>4.1 Integration and internationalization&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.1.1 Globalized integration of real economy&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.1.2 Internationalization of financial markets&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.2 Offshore and onshore markets&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.2.1 Production and capital internalization facilitate the offshore&nbsp;</div><div>financial market formation and development&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.2.2 The orderly connection between offshore and onshore markets&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.3 The design of offshore-onshore connections in China&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.3.1 Rationale&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.3.2 Mode selection&nbsp;</div><div>4.3.3 Basic framework and system&nbsp;</div><div>4.3.4 General principles&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.3.5 Effective measures&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>4.4 Chinese rules for offshore-onshore connections&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>4.4.1 The separation of CIBF’s from domestic onshore RMB account to&nbsp;</div><div>ensure orderly flow and equal rights&nbsp;</div><div>4.4.2 The need to accelerate the amelioration of the offshore financial&nbsp;</div><div>legal system.&nbsp;</div><div>4.4.3 Strengthen risk control&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>4.4.4 Strengthen the appeal of offshore RMB and enhance onshore&nbsp;</div><div>settlement business volume&nbsp;</div><div>4.4.5 Other suggestions&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>Chapter Five The settlement of “carbon emissions trading” in RMB&nbsp;</div><div>─ Explorations in China's pathway of “overtaking on the curve” in&nbsp;</div><div>finance&nbsp;</div>5.1 The Kyoto Protocol&nbsp;<div>5.2 Carbon, carbon emissions rights and carbon emissions trading&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.1 Carbon&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.2. Carbon emissions rights&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.3. Carbon emissions trading&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.4. Formation of carbon commodities&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.5. Carbon forwards&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.6. Carbon futures&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.7. Carbon options&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.8. Carbon Funds&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.2.9. Carbon markets&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.3 The status quo of world carbon market development&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.3.1 European Union&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>5.3.2 The United States&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>5.3.3 Asia&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.3.4 China&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.4 The settlement of “carbon emissions trading” in RMB&nbsp;</div><div>5.4.1 Carbon emissions trading as an institutional arrangement for&nbsp;</div><div>optimizing regional distribution of industries in China&nbsp;</div><div>5.4.2 The development of a standardized carbon market as a financial&nbsp;</div><div>launch pad for China’s 21st Century Maritime Silk Road initiative&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.4.3 “RMB settlement” for “carbon emissions trading” – a new pathway&nbsp;</div><div>towards “overtaking on the curve” for RMB internationalization&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.5. Accelerating the Development of China’s Carbon Market&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.5.1 Establishing and perfecting China’s carbon market system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.5.2 Creating a unified national carbon futures exchange&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.5.3 Striving for a decisive say in Asia’s carbon futures market with&nbsp;</div><div>standardization development as a point of departure&nbsp;</div><div>5.5.4 Strengthening legal frameworks and binding carbon futures trading&nbsp;</div><div>with RMB international settlement to boost RMB’s international standing&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.5.4.1 Devising full-fledged laws to protect carbon property rights&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>5.5.4.2 Incorporating Asia-Pacific countries and regions into China’s&nbsp;</div><div>carbon futures market and prompting the RMB to become a major&nbsp;</div><div>denomination currency for the settlement of carbon futures contracts&nbsp;</div><div>5.5.4.3 Formulating national (international) regulatory norms on carbon&nbsp;</div><div>futures markets&nbsp;</div><div>Chapter Six The present and future of China’s internet finance ─&nbsp;</div><div>The trend of FinTech innovation in China&nbsp;</div><div>6.1 An overview of the development of online banking&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.1.1 Definition of online banking&nbsp;</div><div>6.1.2 Types of online banks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.1.3 An overview of online banking abroad&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.1.4 An overview of online banking in China&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>6.1.4.1 Services of online branches of commercial banks in China&nbsp;<div>6.1.4.2 The development stage of online banking in China&nbsp;</div><div>6.2 An overview of electronic currency&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.2.1 The concept of electronic currency&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.2.2 Types of electronic currencies&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.2.3 Electronic currency and virtual currency&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.3 The development trends of internet finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.3.1 The trend of business integration in Internet finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.3.2 The trend of financialization of online platforms&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.3.3 Challenges facing Internet financial regulation&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.3.3.1 Impacts of Internet financial products on financial regulation.&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.3.3.2 Impacts of blockchain on financial regulation&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.3.3.3 Impacts of monetary policy and monetary regulation&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4 The unique risks of Internet finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.1 System operating risks&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.1.1 Security risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.1.2 Management risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.1.3 Authentication risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.1.4 Outsourcing risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.2 Business risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.2.1 Strategic risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.2.2 Reputation risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.4.2.3 Legal and regulatory risks&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>6.4.2.4 Monetary policy risks&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>6.5 The necessity of China's promoting steady development of Internet&nbsp;</div><div>finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.1 Establishing an effective payment and clearing system for Internet&nbsp;</div><div>finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.2 Establishing a multi-layered legal regulatory system for Internet&nbsp;</div><div>finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.3 Building a three-level Internet financial risk control system&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.3.1 Risk prevention and control at the national and macro level&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.3.2 Risk prevention and control at the industrial and mezzo level&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.3.3 Risk prevention and control at the corporate and micro level&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.4 Promoting intellectual property protection and standardization in&nbsp;</div><div>Internet finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>6.5.5 Strengthening international cooperation for the steady development&nbsp;</div><div>of Internet finance&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>Chapter Seven The prevention and diffusion of systematic or regional&nbsp;</div><div>financial risks ─ The methodology for China to resolve financial&nbsp;</div><div>crises&nbsp;</div><div>7.1 Meaning and types of financial crises&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.1.1 Meaning of financial crises&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.1.2 Systematic risk&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.1.3 Conventional types of financial crises&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>7.1.4 New characteristics of financial crises at the present stage&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>7.2 A review of major financial crises in the world history&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.2.1 The Great Depression from 1929 to 1933&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.2.2 The eruption of the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis&nbsp; &nbsp;</div><div>7.2.3 The international financial crisis of 2007-2008&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3 The U.S. response to the 2008 international financial crisis&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.1 An overview of the US response to the 2008 financial crisis&nbsp; &nbsp;</div><div>7.3.2 The U.S. tactics and measures for the 2008 international financial&nbsp;</div><div>crisis&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.2.1 Three monetary policies by the Federal Reserve 7.3.2.2 Five fiscal&nbsp;</div><div>policies by the U.S. Government&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.2.2 Six measures for strengthening regulation&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.2.3 Six measures for strengthening regulation&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.2.4 Legislative guarantee&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.3 Post-crisis response in the United States&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.3.1 The U.S. loan-based consumption pattern remains unchanged&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.3.2 Government takes over banks, securities agencies and insurance&nbsp;</div><div>companies, yet with the intention of putting them back to private&nbsp;</div><div>management wherever and whenever appropriate&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.3.3.3 Evolution of financial regulatory legislation and market&nbsp;</div><div>developments in the United States&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>7.4 China must anchor financial development in financial stability&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>Chapter Eight Innovation and improvement of the international&nbsp;</div><div>financial architecture ── China’s plan for engagement in&nbsp;</div><div>international finance&nbsp;</div><div>8.1 The structure of international financial institutions&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.2 International financial infrastructure&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.2.1 Payment and clearing systems (on-exchange trading)&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.2.2 Central counterparty clearing and transaction register (OTC&nbsp;</div><div>transactions)&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>8.2.3 Credit rating and financial standards&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>8.2.3.1 The world’s Big Three credit rating agencies&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.2.3.2 The international Big Four accounting firms&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.2.3.3 Financial standards&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.3 Coordination of international financial regulation&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.3.1 International organizations for financial regulatory coordination&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.3.2 Forms of international financial regulatory coordination&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.3.3 Specifics of international financial regulatory coordination&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.3.4 The outlook for international financial regulatory coordination&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.4 China should proactively participate in the building of international&nbsp;</div>financial architecture&nbsp;&nbsp;<div>8.4.1 Building new engines of global economic development&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div><div>8.4.2 Promoting innovation as a new engine of global growth&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.4.3 Promoting global rules as a new engine of growth&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>8.4.4 Promoting the international financial architecture (order) as a new&nbsp;</div><div>engine of growth&nbsp;&nbsp;</div><div>Major References&nbsp;</div></div>
<p><b>Yunxian Chen</b> is a well-known economist and financial expert in China. He was awarded a doctoral degree in economics by Peking University. He founded GF Securities and later worked in various administrative posts, as Executive Deputy Mayor and Mayor of Foshan Municipality Government in Guangdong Province, Secretary of the Communist Party Committee of Foshan City and Chairman of the Municipal People's Congress of Foshan, and Deputy Governor of Guangdong Provincial Government. He is now guest professor and doctoral supervisor at Peking University and Sun Yat-sen University, China.</p><br>
“National finance” is a new concept launched by the author in his&nbsp;book&nbsp;<i>National Finance ─ A Chinese Perspective</i>, a unique monograph&nbsp;that differs from other financial publications dealing with general topics&nbsp;in public finance. The monograph intends to provide a full,&nbsp;well-developed and macro-level exposition of all major aspects of finance&nbsp;from the perspective of the central government, with focus laid on the&nbsp;most essential, immediate and intricate issues in national financial&nbsp;development, which are the "hard nuts" that have to be cracked on both&nbsp;central and regional levels and on the fronts of both offshore and onshore&nbsp;finance. It attempts to cope with a series of formidable challenges that a&nbsp;country, particularly its top government officials, must take in developing&nbsp;finance: how national finance should develop and overtake in the face of&nbsp;rising financial industries, how it should respond to the influx of&nbsp;AI+blockchain technologies, how a country guards against and copes&nbsp;with systematic or regional financial risks with security, fluidity and&nbsp;profitability serving as its cornerstones, how it can build up and promote&nbsp;the new international financial system and governance amid international&nbsp;financial powers around the world, and so on.&nbsp;<div><br></div><div><b>Yunxian Chen</b>&nbsp;is a well-known economist and financial expert in China. He was awarded a doctoral degree in economics by Peking University. He founded GF Securities and later worked in various administrative posts, as Executive Deputy Mayor and Mayor of Foshan Municipality Government in Guangdong Province, Secretary of the Communist Party Committee of Foshan City and Chairman of the Municipal People's Congress of Foshan, and Deputy Governor of Guangdong Provincial Government. He is now guest professor and doctoral supervisor at Peking University and Sun Yat-sen University, China.<br></div><div><br></div>
<p>Explores how theories of finance work when applied to a national, rather than global setting</p><p>Gives insights into the plans and goals of national-level planners in China today</p><p>Offers a model for centralized financial planning not only for China but other developing nations as well</p>

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