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BusinessWeek January 19, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
Worrying About China Is it growing too fast? Can Beijing hold the financial system together? Will economic reform materialize? |
BusinessWeek March 8, 2004 Frederik Balfour |
Chinese Reform Picks Up Speed Beijing is making smart moves, but bad loans are still a big problem |
BusinessWeek August 25, 2003 Frederik Balfour |
Drowning in Dollars It's a problem for China, but is revaluing the yuan a wise move? |
BusinessWeek April 4, 2005 Bremner & Balfour |
Beware Of Hot Money With foreign cash piling in, China's economy could boil over |
BusinessWeek November 3, 2003 Roberts & Balfour |
Is China's Boom In Danger? In the country's racing economy, overcapacity may soon take its toll. |
BusinessWeek October 6, 2003 Frederik Balfour |
Another Big Reason China Won't Revalue Already awash in bad loans, its Big Four banks could go under if depositors bolt. |
BusinessWeek April 14, 2010 Dexter Roberts |
Can China Cool Its Economy? With a white-hot property market and double-digit growth, China's overheated economy may be heading for trouble. Why Beijing needs to act - and fast. |
BusinessWeek June 26, 2006 Brian Bremner |
The Fire This Time In China Raging growth means Beijing must raise rates or devalue the yuan. Both are risky. |
BusinessWeek December 12, 2005 Brian Bremner |
Banking On Reform In China People's Bank of China's Zhou Xiaochuan is aiming for a floating yuan, real bond and stock markets, and more. |
BusinessWeek November 15, 2004 Balfour & Roberts |
The Leak In China's Banking System Frustrated with low returns, Chinese savers are taking money out of state banks and lending it themselves. |
BusinessWeek October 18, 2004 Pete Engardio |
Untying The Yuan Would Get China Out Of A Bind By keeping the undervalued yuan pegged at 8.28 to the U.S. dollar, China is making it impossible for the U.S. to cut its $600 billion balance-of-payments deficit and is forcing other nations to intervene in their currencies. |
BusinessWeek October 18, 2004 Miller, Engardio & Roberts |
High Expansion. Low Inflation. What Gives? China's boom, heady investment, and growing trade make for a potent combo. |
U.S. Banker November 2002 Karen Krebsbach |
Citigroup's Big Bet on China China is the final financial frontier for U.S. banks, as the country's protectionist measures begin to dissolve under WTO membership. Citibank, which has been offering corporate services on the mainland since 1902, is poised to grab a large share. But will being the early bird pay off? |
Finance & Development September 1, 2005 Eswar S. Prasad |
Next Steps for China Why financial sector reform is a crucial element of a long-term economic growth strategy. |
BusinessWeek February 23, 2004 Bremner & Roberts |
How Beijing May Loosen Up China's leaders are still hedging, but a wider trading band for the yuan is likely. A review of the issues concerning the under valued yuan is discussed. |
BusinessWeek February 7, 2005 Dexter Roberts |
China: Sticking To The Fast Lane Beijing won't be doing much to tame the nation's sizzling growth. |
BusinessWeek December 13, 2004 Bremner & Engardio |
The Makings Of A Meltdown If investors needed a wake-up call about how heavily the global financial system relies on the actions of Asia's central banks, they received a nasty one on Nov. 26. |
BusinessWeek May 3, 2004 Roberts & Balfour |
Are China's Home Lenders Pumping Up A Bubble? The ease with which home-buyers jump into the real estate market is fueling much of China's current boom -- and worrying Chinese authorities. |
BusinessWeek August 4, 2003 Mark L. Clifford |
Should China Revalue? Soon, It May Have No Choice The debate over revaluing the Chinese yuan is gathering steam. Stockbrokers, fund managers, corporate executives, and currency traders are all betting on a revaluation by pouring money into the country. The very weight of all this money may force officials to act. |
BusinessWeek December 30, 2009 Dexter Roberts |
Mania on the Mainland Think the U.S. real estate bubble was bad? China's could be worse. |
BusinessWeek July 28, 2003 Roberts & Clifford |
Morgan Stanley: What Great Wall? In a joint venture, the big U.S. bank breaks into China's financial sector |
BusinessWeek June 21, 2004 Welch, Roberts & Edmondson |
GM: Gunning It In China General Motors is expanding in China and hoping that the economy won't hit a wall. |
BusinessWeek May 9, 2005 Brian Bremner |
Wanted: A Big Broom For China's Banks Beijing is trying to sweep away corruption and bad loans at its huge state lenders before taking them public. |
BusinessWeek September 27, 2004 Bremner et al. |
Is Asia Prepared for the Next Crisis? Sound budgets, big trade surpluses, healthier banks -- the developing world has come a long way. That's why investors are pouring in money. But the risks haven't disappeared. |
BusinessWeek April 19, 2004 Frederik Balfour |
Separating The Wheat From The Chaff Is China fever giving way to China fatigue? Earlier this year, investors couldn't seem to get enough of Chinese stocks. |
BusinessWeek January 26, 2004 Frederik Balfour |
Will China's Bank Bailout Do The Trick? Beijing is pumping new billions into state-owned giants, but it's unclear whether that will be followed by real reforms. |
BusinessWeek November 22, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
China: A Bit Of Theater Starring The Yuan The message is clear. China wants to introduce more flexibility into its currency system, and so stave off U.S. pressure. But any changes will be incremental, within Beijing's time frame, and designed to keep China as competitive as ever. |
BusinessWeek June 14, 2004 Bremner & Tashiro |
Is Japan Back? After a disastrous decade, markets, household spending, and once-struggling sectors are soaring. Here's the story behind the numbers. |
BusinessWeek November 17, 2003 Frederik Balfour |
Bulls Let Loose In the China Shop All of a sudden, China's IPOs are white hot. Is this a bubble in the making? |
Knowledge@Wharton |
Does China Pose an Economic Threat to the United States? It would appear so, given the rhetoric in recent months by American politicians and some businesspeople, who have complained about the loss of U.S. jobs to China and unfair Chinese trade practices. But faculty members at business schools say the complaints are misplaced and driven by politics. |
BusinessWeek March 22, 2004 Bruce Einhorn |
China: Wen Won't Slam On The Brakes The appetite for jobs is the main reason promised economic restraint is unlikely |
BusinessWeek May 6, 2010 Bruce Einhorn |
Get Ready for the World's Biggest IPO Agricultural Bank of China wants to raise at least $30 billion, as Chinese lenders evolve from government playthings to globally competitive banks. |
BusinessWeek March 8, 2004 Miller et al. |
Prices: How High Is Up? Thanks in large part to exploding demand from China, two decades of low inflation are ending. But that's no cause for panic |
BusinessWeek October 11, 2004 Einhorn & Roberts |
Now College Grads Can't Find A Job A job shortage for people just out of college or graduate school is a worldwide problem. Until recently the exception, even graduates in China are now facing frustration when they graduate. |
BusinessWeek July 5, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
Power Shortages Are Zapping China China can't keep up with the soaring demand for energy. Will that hurt the export machine? |
BusinessWeek November 15, 2004 Bremner, Roberts et al. |
Asia's Great Oil Hunt China needs energy more than ever. Its oil consumption is second only to the U.S., and its quest to secure enough oil and gas to keep its economy humming will change the world |
BusinessWeek October 25, 2004 Roberts & Balfour |
Is China Running Out Of Workers? As farmers stay home, factories in China scramble for employees. It's all putting pressure on wages. |
BusinessWeek December 20, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
China Goes Shopping Billions of dollars, euros, and yen have been invested to build up companies on the China mainland in the last decade. Now Chinese companies, flush with cash and in command of the world's lowest-cost manufacturing plants, are doing some foreign investing of their own. |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Bruce Einhorn |
Commentary: China: Behind The Swagger, Weakness Wen could be tripped up by a soaring trade deficit and massive unemployment |
BusinessWeek August 2, 2004 Dexter Roberts |
China's Credit Crunch No interest rate increase. That looks like one of China's big accomplishments in its quest to cool off the economy, but Beijing's go-slow policy is strangling private business. |
BusinessWeek February 16, 2004 Matthew Miller |
China: A Wild World For Funds More foreign firms are moving to set up joint fund management outfits in China. |
BusinessWeek October 22, 2009 Roberts & Engardio |
The China Hype Despite an impressive rebound, an innovation shortfall may hobble sustainable growth in China. |
BusinessWeek October 10, 2005 Frederik Balfour |
A Reality Check For Shanghai Real Estate Property sales in Shanghai are cooling off. That could rock China's already shaky banks - and even dent the economy. |
Inc. March 2005 Ted C. Fishman |
How China Will Change Your Business Fourteen things every entrepreneur should know about the capitalist explosion heading our way. But don't assume that conceding China's rise means conceding to China. |
BusinessWeek December 9, 2010 Dexter Roberts |
A Chinese Conference on Inflation The government's Economic Work Conference in Bejing will focus on how quickly the Chinese economy can grow without overheating. |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Bremner, Tashiro & Roberts |
Japan's Joyride On China's Coattails Soaring exports to the mainland are the driving force behind Japan's first sustained recovery in a decade |
BusinessWeek December 13, 2004 Frederik Balfour |
Bolstering China's Banks Beijing seems serious about bank reform, and bad-loan burdens are easing. China is racing to upgrade its banking system in advance of a 2007 WTO deadline for fully opening the sector to foreign competition. |
BusinessWeek July 11, 2005 Rich Miller |
Too Much Money A global savings glut is good for growth -- but risks are mounting. |
BusinessWeek December 10, 2009 Dexter Roberts |
China's 'Made in China' Problem The downside to Beijing's huge stimulus is a glut of factories and output that may spur trade frictions. |
On Wall Street September 1, 2013 Milton Ezrati |
Can China's Economy Make a Soft Landing Predictions of a hard landing for this nation's economy are overblown. |