Book description
The western world attributed China's role as world's largest financer
of the developed world and third largest economy in the world to new
economic efficiencies, a revolution in risk management and its own wise
policies. China and the Credit Crisis argues that if the extent of the
role played in the new prosperity by an emerging China, and the
fundamental nature of the changes it brought had been better understood,
more appropriate policies and actions would have been adopted at the
time which could have avoided the crash, or at least limited its impact.
China's Credit Crisis examines the larger role that China will play
in the recovery from the current credit crisis and in the post-crisis
world. It addresses the major questions which arise from the
financial crisis and discuss the landscape of the post-credit crisis
world, initially by continuing to provide growth to a world deep in
recession, and later by sharing global economic and political
leadership
Giles Chance is a visiting professor at the
Guanghua Business School at Peking University, where he first taught a
class in 1999. He met his Chinese wife at the World Bank in 1984, and
first visited China in 1988. Since 1989, he has advised numerous
foreign companies and investors in China, and has assisted many
Chinese companies to source technology from Western companies, and
raise capital in the Hong Kong and London markets. Giles was educated
at St. Andrew's University in Scotland and at the Tuck School of
Business at Dartmouth College in the United States, where he was a
Fulbright Scholar.