Member Views
Media | Title | Article date | Article source |
---|---|---|---|
William R. Rhodes:China Doing Less than it Should on Debt ReconstructuringBill Rhodes, former Chairman of Citibank and President and CEO of William Rhodes Global Advisors, shares his perspective on the G20, China's economy, and how Biden can restore U.S. leadership. |
Mon, Nov 23, 2020 | Bloomberg | |
Danny Leipziger:China Has a Unique Opportunity to Take the Lead on Emerging Market IndebtednessThe current state of the global economy and the outlook for the next few years do not bode well for Emerging Market and Developing Economies (EMDEs). Many countries were overly indebted before the pandemic and additional borrowing, one of the few options available to them, will push many into the terrain of unsustainable debt. China’s joining the Debt Service Suspension Initiative of the G-20 is commendable; however, this action only deals with official debt held by poorer EMDEs. |
Fri, Jan 15, 2021 | The Bretton Woods Committee | |
Kevin Gallagher:China must calibrate overseas lending towards Paris climate goalsWith the demise of US leadership on climate change, China enters this week’s Conference of the Parties to the Paris climate agreement poised to take the mantle as the world’s leader on energy and climate change. |
Thu, Dec 13, 2018 | Financial Times |
|
William Rhodes and Stuart Mackintosh:China must shield the rest of its economy from the property contagionThe Bretton Woods Committee is proud to Member Spotlight a recent opinion article authored by BWC Vice-Chair William Rhodes and Group of 30 Executive Director Stuart Mackintosh. The article emphasizes the imperative for China to safeguard the broader economy from the property contagion. Their suggestions include advocating for short-term resilience and endorsing Beijing's consideration of allowing developers to face consequences. |
Fri, Feb 9, 2024 | South China Morning Post | |
Rebecca Patterson:China Stuck.The Bretton Woods Committee is pleased to Member Spotlight Rebecca Patterson's recent publication with News Items exploring China's economic challenges and the limitations it faces in achieving sustained growth. Overall, Rebecca appears to suggests that significant policy changes are needed to address China's growth limitations |
Wed, Mar 6, 2024 | News Items | |
Helen Qiao:China Would Be Able to Double Its GDP by 2035, Says Bank of AmericaChina has stood out as one of the fastest-growing economies amid the Covid-19 pandemic, says Helen Qiao of Bank of America in an interview with CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia.” |
Fri, Feb 26, 2021 | CNBC |
|
Lourdes Casanova:China's Reforms Move May Just Be Bargaining Chip for US NegotiatorsChina is coherent with their plan to be an open economy and its belief in the power of globalization. |
Fri, Jul 5, 2019 | Voice of America |
|
BWC Vice Chair William Rhodes and G30 Executive Director Stuart P.M. Mackintosh:China's Self-Destructive Tech TakedownChina’s leaders think that they can crack down on the country’s private technology sector and still deliver material progress as state-owned companies take over. But by reversing the policies that enabled decades of rapid growth, they risk imperiling the unique economic model they seek to sustain. |
Tue, Oct 12, 2021 | Bretton Woods Committee | |
Hung Tran:China’s Big Gamble in the South China SeaThe Bretton Woods Committee is pleased to Member Spotlight Hung Tran's recent article in The Diplomat discussing the escalating tension between China and the Philippines over their sovereignty dispute concerning the Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea. According to Tran, "Heightened China-Philippines tension around Second Thomas Shoal could escalate to military skirmishes – and that’s a chance Beijing appears willing to take." |
Wed, Jan 17, 2024 | The Diplomat | |
William Rhodes:China’s impending Minsky momentTwo years ago, Zhou Xiaochuan, then China’s central bank governor, told a press conference at the 19th Communist party Congress in Beijing that too many procyclical factors in the economy and excessive optimism risked generating “accumulating contradictions that could lead to the so-called Minsky moment”. |
Sun, Dec 29, 2019 | Financial Times |