The Latecomer’s Rise: Policy Banks and the Globalization of China’s Development Finance (Coell Studies in Money)

政治、社会

The Latecomer’s Rise: Policy Banks and the Globalization of China’s Development Finance (Coell Studies in Money)

by: Muyang Chen (Author)

Publisher: Coell University Press

Publication Date: June 15, 2024

Language: English

Print Length: 240 pages

ISBN-10: 1501775855

ISBN-13: 9781501775857

Book Description

In The Latecomer’s Rise, Muyang Chen reveals the nature and impact of a rapidly growing form of inteational lending: Chinese development finance.Over the past few decades, China has become the world’s largest provider of bilateral development finance. Through its two national policy banks, the China Development Bank (CDB) and the Export-Import Bank of China (China Exim), it has funded infrastructure and industrial projects in numerous emerging markets and developing countries. Yet this very surge and magnitude of capital has raised questions about the characteristics of Chinese bilateral lending and its repercussions on the inteational order. Drawing on a variety of novel Chinese primary sources, including interviews and official bank documents, Chen pinpoints the distinctiveness of Chinese bilateral development finance, explains its origins, and analyzes its effects. She compares Chinese policy banks with their foreign counterparts to show that the CDB and China Exim, while state-supported, are in fact also market-oriented―they are as much govement organs as they are profit-driven financial agencies that serve both state and firms’ interests. This approach, which emerged out of China’s particular economic history, suggests that Chinese overseas lending is not merely a tool of economic statecraft that challenges Weste-led economic regimes. Instead, China’s responses to extant rules, norms, and practices across given issue areas have varied between contestation and convergence.Rich with empirical detail and penetrating insights, The Latecomer’s Rise demystifies the little-known workings of Chinese development finance to revise our conceptions of China’s role in the inteational financial system.
In The Latecomer’s Rise, Muyang Chen reveals the nature and impact of a rapidly growing form of inteational lending: Chinese development finance.Over the past few decades, China has become the world’s largest provider of bilateral development finance. Through its two national policy banks, the China Development Bank (CDB) and the Export-Import Bank of China (China Exim), it has funded infrastructure and industrial projects in numerous emerging markets and developing countries. Yet this very surge and magnitude of capital has raised questions about the characteristics of Chinese bilateral lending and its repercussions on the inteational order. Drawing on a variety of novel Chinese primary sources, including interviews and official bank documents, Chen pinpoints the distinctiveness of Chinese bilateral development finance, explains its origins, and analyzes its effects. She compares Chinese policy banks with their foreign counterparts to show that the CDB and China Exim, while state-supported, are in fact also market-oriented―they are as much govement organs as they are profit-driven financial agencies that serve both state and firms’ interests. This approach, which emerged out of China’s particular economic history, suggests that Chinese overseas lending is not merely a tool of economic statecraft that challenges Weste-led economic regimes. Instead, China’s responses to extant rules, norms, and practices across given issue areas have varied between contestation and convergence.Rich with empirical detail and penetrating insights, The Latecomer’s Rise demystifies the little-known workings of Chinese development finance to revise our conceptions of China’s role in the inteational financial system. Read more

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