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The Great Wall of Money

Power and Politics in China's International Monetary Relations
  • Edited by: Eric Helleiner and Jonathan Kirshner
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2014
View more publications by Cornell University Press
Cornell Studies in Money
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About this book

By illuminating the politics of China's international monetary relations, this book provides a timely account of the global economy, the role of the renminbi in international relations, and the trajectory of China’s continuing ascendency in the coming decades.

Author / Editor information

Eric Helleiner is Professor and Faculty of Arts Chair in International Political Economy, Department of Political Science and Balsillie School of International Affairs, University of Waterloo. He is the author of Forgotten Foundations of Bretton Woods, States and the Reemergence of Global Finance, and The Making of National Money, all from Cornell, and Towards North American Monetary Union? Jonathan Kirshner is Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy at Cornell University. He is the author most recently of Hollywood's Last Golden Age and American Power after the Financial Crisis, both from Cornell. Helleiner and Kirshner are coeditors of The Future of the Dollar, also from Cornell.

Reviews

Zhaohui Wang:

The Great Wall of Money is a timely and rigorous study on the role that power and politics play in forging China's international monetary relations.... [It] is highly recommended for scholars of international political economy of money and China specialists. As the book examines both international and domestic sources of China's international monetary policy, it will leave the reader with a deep sense of carefulness when it comes to the temptation to make sweeping judgements about China's rising monetary power.

Kerry Brown:

This excellent collection of essays, derived from a conference held in 2012, centres on the question posed by its editors, Eric Helleiner and Jonathan Kirshner, in the introduction: broadly speaking, will the world's second largest economy prove to be a 'taker', ‘maker’ or ‘breaker’?

Winnie King:

Eric Helleiner and Jonathan Kirshner's edited volume, which examines the role, rationale, and impact of decisionmaking in China’s monetary and financial sectors, represents an important contribution to the literature on Chinese political economy. Offering readers an accessible examination of the nexus of political economy and power politics in China, this is a valuable addition to a rather under-researched field (though published material on business and management is quite extensive). While industry stakeholders and commentators have written extensively on China’s currency reform, exchange rate policy, and IMF’s Special Drawing Rights Basket, they offer little insight into the why—the motivations, players, andpriorities—behind China’s approach to monetary policy and relations. In this volume, each chapter blends an impressive combination of research methods, expertise, and critical insights, filling this gap effectively.

R.P. Gardella:

As Helleiner (Univ. of Waterloo, Canada) and Kirshner (Cornell Univ.) affirm, discussions of China's contemporary and potential future roles in global monetary relations have usually been framedthrough the narrow lens of economic analysis. By stressing power and politics as essential determinants of Chinese monetary policies, the contributors to this timely volume's eight chapters seek to redress this deficiency, approaching the subject from a wide range of perspectives. The essayists include both China scholars and international monetary specialists, and they focus widely on the various types of international monetary power the People's Republic of China (PRC) party-state is acquiring. These include financing payment imbalances; steadily gaining greater influence in key institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund; and fostering the global status of China's currency (renminbi). At issue is whether China will basically accept the existing rules of the international monetary game, demand significant changes in those rules, or breakcompletely with the current system. The divergent explanations in these essays of the PRC's priorities and preferencesmirror Beijing's own policy ambivalence. They suggest that although China has cautiously accepted but frequently critiqued the status quo, it has thus far conspicuously failed to offer any grand scheme to replace it.

Robert S. Ross, Boston College, author of Chinese Security Policy:

The Great Wall of Money offers a theoretically informed analysis based on in-depth research on the likely impact of China's rise on international economic affairs.


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Eric Helleiner and Jonathan Kirshner
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
September 8, 2014
eBook ISBN:
9780801454677
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
288
Illustrations:
2
Tables:
2
Other:
2 tables, 11 charts
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