TY - JOUR
T1 - Is China‘s financial sector reform the answer to economic globalisation?
AU - Morales, Lucia
AU - Andreosso-O‘Callaghan, Bernadette
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Transition Academia Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The Chinese banking system is of interest to the analysts and scholars who seek to understand whether China‘s financial reforms are susceptible to contribute to the needed conditions that support fast economic growth and development. Before the Global Financial Crisis, China‘s economy was growing rapidly, and the country has now embarked upon a “new normal economic model.” This entails a greater development scope for China‘s financial system. “The Big Four” Chinese commercial banks remain under the control and surveillance of the central government, a situation that raises significant criticisms among those who support banking deregulation, liberalisation and efficiency. However, China has shown that it was relatively prepared to manage two major crises - the Asian Economic and Financial Crisis, and the Global Financial Crisis - and that the close monitoring of its financial system should not be too easily dismissed. The main findings from this study highlight that the “Big Four” do not seem to be impacted upon by regional or global uncertainty, but that causal dynamics exist between Chinese top banks and regional market uncertainty, a phenomenon that needs to be carefully considered by policy makers.
AB - The Chinese banking system is of interest to the analysts and scholars who seek to understand whether China‘s financial reforms are susceptible to contribute to the needed conditions that support fast economic growth and development. Before the Global Financial Crisis, China‘s economy was growing rapidly, and the country has now embarked upon a “new normal economic model.” This entails a greater development scope for China‘s financial system. “The Big Four” Chinese commercial banks remain under the control and surveillance of the central government, a situation that raises significant criticisms among those who support banking deregulation, liberalisation and efficiency. However, China has shown that it was relatively prepared to manage two major crises - the Asian Economic and Financial Crisis, and the Global Financial Crisis - and that the close monitoring of its financial system should not be too easily dismissed. The main findings from this study highlight that the “Big Four” do not seem to be impacted upon by regional or global uncertainty, but that causal dynamics exist between Chinese top banks and regional market uncertainty, a phenomenon that needs to be carefully considered by policy makers.
KW - Dynamic causality
KW - Economic and policy uncertainty
KW - Financial reform
KW - Market models
KW - “the big four”
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85083851862&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.14666/2194-7759-8-2-003
DO - 10.14666/2194-7759-8-2-003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85083851862
SN - 2194-7740
VL - 8
SP - 43
EP - 70
JO - Journal Global Policy and Governance
JF - Journal Global Policy and Governance
IS - 2
ER -