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The Role of Foreign Trade and Investment in China's Economic Transformation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

In the almost two decades since economic reform began in China the role of the foreign sector has burgeoned in ways that no one anticipated. The volume of foreign trade and the role of foreign capital are both far greater than could have been foreseen based on the modest Chinese economic reforms initiated in the late 1970s. By the mid-1990s China had become one of the world's largest trading nations, the recipient of more foreign direct investment than any other country in the world, the largest borrower from the World Bank, the largest recipient of official development assistance in the form of low-interest, long-term concessionary loans from industrialized countries, and, except for the Czech Republic, the only transition economy with ready access to international capital and equity markets.

Type
China's Transitional Economy
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1995

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References

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8 Moody's rates China's long-term sovereign debt at A3 while Standard and Poor's gives a rating of BBB. Both are investment grade ratings. Other transition economies that have rated sovereign debt, but which have been assigned below investment grade ratings, are Hungary and Slovakia. Transition, Vol. 5, No. 9 (November-December) 1994, p. 13. Both agencies initially assigned ratings to the Bank of China, the Industrial and Commercial Bank, the People's Construction Bank of China, the Bank of Communications, China International Trust and Investment Company (CITIC), and the Guangdong International Trust and Investment Company (GITIC) that were identical to those they gave to China's sovereign debt. However, in April 1995 Moody's downgraded the first four of these to Baa.Prior to that it had watchlisted CITIC for a potential downgrade. Although Baa is still an investment grade rating, the downgrade led the Bank of China to cancel a HK$5 billion floating rate certificate of deposit issue.

9 Technically the fee is still set annually by the Executive Directors of the World Bank. But it has been set at zero from fiscal year 1989 to fiscal year 1995.

10 Technically China Brilliance Automotive Holdings Limited is a Bermuda-based holding company, not a Chinese company. However, since the holding company's only asset is a 51% ownership in the Shenyang Jinbei Passenger Vehicle Manufacturing Company, Ltd., for practical purposes it may be regarded as a Chinese company. The holding company was established in 1992, only a few months before the initial public offering of the stock on the New York Stock Exchange. According to some sources the Bermuda holding company was created simply to escape the approvals required by China's Securities Regulatory Commission for overseas listings of Chinese firms.

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17 World Bank, China: Macroeconomic Stability in a Decentralized Economy, p. 14. Even this calculation, since it utilizes the official exchange rate to convert China's GNP in yuan into U.S. dollars, overstates the magnitude of the surplus. Taking into account the real purchasing power of the Chinese currency, China's estimated GNP would be at least three times higher and the current account surplus as a percentage of GNP only one-third, or even less, than the 3.7% estimate.

18 Based on estimated total reserves of $49 billion at year-end 1993 and the official figure of $4,773 billion for year-end 1981. Chinese Finance and Banking Society, 1993 Zhongguo jinrong nianjian (Almanac of China's Finance and Banking 1993) (Beijing: Zhongguo jinrong nianjian bianjibu (Chinese Finance and Banking Compilation Department), 1993), p. 368.

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27 Based on the estimate that they account for 2% of manufactured goods output.

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