Hong Kong as an International Financial Centre

Hong Kong as an International Financial Centre

Author: Dr Catherine Schenk

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2001-03-15

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 1134626053

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Based on previously unpublished archival records, this book makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the development of Hong Kong as one of the worlds premier international financial centres.


Hong Kong's Global Financial Centre and China's Development

Hong Kong's Global Financial Centre and China's Development

Author: Yan-leung Cheung

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2016-12-08

Total Pages: 143

ISBN-13: 1317284763

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This book provides an overview of Hong Kong’s role as an international financial centre, focusing especially on how Hong Kong has contributed significantly, and continues to contribute significantly, to China’s economic development. It considers the importance of Hong Kong’s stock market in raising finance for Chinese companies, explores the potential of Hong Kong as an offshore financial centre, and discusses recent regulatory reforms. It concludes by assessing the prospects for Hong Kong’s continuing success as a global financial centre, and puts forward recommendations for policies which would help secure continuing success.


Hong Kong as an International Financial Centre

Hong Kong as an International Financial Centre

Author: Y. C. Jao

Publisher:

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 200

ISBN-13:

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This book analyzes the role of Hong Kong as a prominent financial centre . Issues such as taxonomy of financial centres, reasons for Hong Kong's past success, competition from other centres, policy issues, and speculation upon Hong Kong's future are discussed.


Business and Politics in Asia's Key Financial Centres

Business and Politics in Asia's Key Financial Centres

Author: J. J. Woo

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-12-14

Total Pages: 160

ISBN-13: 9812879854

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This book provides unique insights into the politics of finance and the socio-political relations which drive financial policymaking in Hong kong, Singapore, and Shanghai. While the existing literature in the field focuses mainly on economic explanations for financial centre development, this book fills a gap by focusing on the socio-political relations which underpin the financial policy-making process. Drawing on extensive interviews with senior policy-makers and financial sector professionals, the book describes how state-industry relations drive financial policy-making in three major financial hubs. Insights and policy recommendations drawn from these interviews will be particularly useful for policy-makers and financial sector professionals hoping to draw lessons from the successful development of the three leading Asian financial centres. Business and Politics in Asia's Key Financial Centres draws on public policy theoretical frameworks for its analytical basis. The three chapters focusing on the historical development of Hong Kong, Singapore, and Shanghai also provide a consolidated narrative with regard to the development of these three cities as leading financial centres, while also serving as independent case studies. Scholars focusing on policy processes and political factors that underpin financial sector development, as well as instructors and students of public policy, international political economy, and financial sector policy, will find this book useful for their research.


Gateways to Globalisation

Gateways to Globalisation

Author: François Gipouloux

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing

Published: 2011-01-01

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 0857934252

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'Gateways to Globalisation makes a significant contribution to the understanding of the emerging East Asian regional system of financial centres within the broader global context and how they interact within the global circuits of finance. In particular, it focuses on the emergence of the financial centres of Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Singapore and the attempts by both national governments and the private sector to position them so that they become more competitive in the global and regional context. The volume shows much historical sensitivity showing that while the increase in the importance of these financial centres is principally post 1945, their emergence has been aided by the deep historical roots that go back several centuries. The book will be of great value in the interpretation of the role of East Asia in what many commentators have called the "Asian Century".' – Terry McGee, The University of British Columbia, Canada 'Gateways to Globalisation cogently demonstrates that Hong Kong, Singapore, Beijing, Shanghai, and Tokyo operate as gateways to Asia and as linchpins for Asia to the global economy. The authors' theoretical frameworks and original empirical research support provocative findings that challenge conventional thinking. Tokyo may decline as a global city. As Beijing and Shanghai ride China's rapid growth they face uncertainty about its future openness to the global economy. Vibrant Hong Kong and Singapore confront challenges from other rising centers.' – David Meyer, Washington University in St Louis, US 'This book distinguishes itself in its emphasis on historical and cultural links as well as contemporary globalization processes on large East Asian cities. Arising from a research program and four seminars, the editor has picked scholars who can relate past and present trends. Historical links of Japanese cities are explored. Leading world cities in the region are analysed in their evolution from entrepôts to modern gateways, service integrators, transport hubs and financial centres. It is a study of the integration and interrelationships of East Asian cities in the global economy.' – Yue-man Yeung, Chinese University of Hong Kong Asia's trading and financial hubs have become global cities which frequently have more in common and closer linkages with each other than with their corresponding hinterlands. As this book expounds, these global cities illustrate to what extent world trends deeply penetrate and permeate the national territorial interiors and processes that were otherwise presumed to be controlled by the State. Gateways to Globalisation is soundly based on accurate and extensive research (including perspectives from historians, economists, geographers and sociologists) from China, Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong, in order to grasp the regional character of trade and finance, beyond national borders and traditional academic frameworks. The book documents that today, major urban centres such as Tokyo, Beijing, Singapore, Hong Kong and Shanghai situated on the periphery of the maritime corridor of East Asia, form a system characterised by the intensity of their economic linkages and integration into the world economy. Since the mid-1980s, these major Asian cities have become the worldwide-oriented centres for production, trade, finance and research. This collective effort offers, in addition to its regional framework, up-to-date information that strengthens an original trans-disciplinary analysis of a region and its economic characteristics, which will be of interest to readers within academia and beyond. This well-detailed and thorough work will interest academics and post-graduate students in economics, geography, finance, history, regional studies and Asian studies, as well as those who have a general interest in globalisation.


Financial markets and institutions. A comparison of China and international financial centers

Financial markets and institutions. A comparison of China and international financial centers

Author: Nadiia Kudriashova

Publisher: GRIN Verlag

Published: 2019-04-01

Total Pages: 24

ISBN-13: 3668911452

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Essay from the year 2017 in the subject Economics - Finance, grade: MA, Yale University, language: English, abstract: International Finance Center (IFC) are an integral part of the modern international financial economy. One of its basic components is the availability of developed national financial markets, actively interacting with similar markets in other countries. As an example, the United States can lead the UK, Japan, in economic development which play an important role the financial markets, and the major cities of these countries (New York, London, Tokyo), are the major international financial centers. Cities can be seen as the gateway to the global economy. They are important for the functioning of both national and global economy, since they are concentrated huge financial, informational and intellectual resources, based most of the major industrial, commercial, financial and service companies, specialized credit and financial institutions and banks. In addition to traditional MFC in the last decades of the 20th century a number of new financial centers competing for the role of international. The acceleration of globalization and especially its financial component, led to an increase in strength and influence regional financial centers, in particular, such as Hong Kong (Hong Kong). The financial market of China, which is traditionally considered to be emerging financial markets have long been a mature international financial centers that have an impact not only on the regional economy, but also in the distribution of global capital flows. The study of the functioning of the MFC, their development trends is the most important area for the understanding of the new global economy, its characteristics and movement mechanisms. At the same time identifying new trends in the development of Asian financial centers, particularly their inclusion in the competition for international corporations have mastered the financial market, is both scientific and practical interest. This makes it possible to identify local features of financial globalization as a result of the connection and the active development of the Asia-Pacific Economic Space with new financial centers, show their role, prospects and competitiveness in the global economy. Of particular importance is the study of the development of Chinese financial market, especially given the fact that the IMF has recognized the yuan a freely usable currency, reflecting the expanding role of China in world trade, a significant increase in the use of the yuan in the international scale and the growth of operations with it.


China's Impact on Hong Kong's Position As an International Financial Centre

China's Impact on Hong Kong's Position As an International Financial Centre

Author: Jiangyu Wang

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 35

ISBN-13:

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Hong Kong's ambition to maintain its position as an international financial centre - or even to become a more significant one, depends overwhelmingly on the market of Mainland China (hereinafter the Mainland, China or the PRC). China, however, provides a mixed blessing for Hong Kong in this regard, arising out of the inevitable co-existence of integration and competition between the two regions under Chinese sovereignty. This chapter examines the impact of Mainland China on Hong Kong's status as an international financial centre from legal and policy perspectives. It is organized as follows: Part II looks at the direct economic concessions offered by China through the FTA. Part III discusses the challenges of China's SOEs, many of them are listed in the Hong Kong Exxhange, to the regulatory environment of Hong Kong's stock market. Part IV analyses the impact of the rise of Shanghai and Shenzhen on Hong Kong, focusing on the implications of Shanghai's ambition, driven by China's relevant industrial policies, to be an international financial centre. Part V concludes.


Shifting Capital

Shifting Capital

Author: Paola Subacchi

Publisher: Chatham House (Formerly Riia)

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781862032620

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Summary: China's financial integration will trigger fundamental changes in the global economy in the coming decades. Financial reform will eventually allow Beijing to open China's capital account fully and to make its currency fully convertible. In turn, this will help in rebalancing the global economy and eventually alter the international monetary system. This is why policy-makers around the world, and particularly those from other systemically important countries, should pay close attention to the changing financial landscape in China. This report focuses on the steps that China is taking to reform its financial services sector through the incremental development of the financial centers in the Greater China region. As clusters of activities and services that connect different operators and facilitate financial transactions among them, financial centers are where China's reform measures are seen in action and where their impact can be assessed and measured. Thus they are the report's main unit of analysis. The report takes a broad regional approach, and so includes the four financial centers in Greater China, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Hong Kong and Taipei. These are centers that, in different ways and with different competitive advantages, both rival and complement one another in serving Greater China's large regional economy, as well as helping it become more integrated in the world economy.


International Financial Centres after the Global Financial Crisis and Brexit

International Financial Centres after the Global Financial Crisis and Brexit

Author: Youssef Cassis

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2018-07-04

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 0192549456

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As well as marking the tenth anniversary of the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the consequent unleashing of the global financial crisis, 2018 is also the year of negotiations on the terms of the UK's exit from the European Union. Within a decade the banking world has witnessed two epochal events with potential to redraw the map of international financial centres: but how much has this map actually changed since 2008, and how is it likely to change in the near future? International Financial Centres after the Global Financial Crisis and Brexit gathers together leading economic historians, geographers, and other social scientists to focus on the post-2008 developments in key international financial centres. It focuses on the shifting hierarchies of New York, London, Paris, Geneva, Zurich, Frankfurt, Singapore, Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai, and Tokyo to question whether Asian financial centres have taken advantage of the crisis in the West. It also examines the medium-effects of the crisis, the level of regulation, and the rise of new technology (fintech). By exploring these crucial changes, it questions whether shifts in the financial industry and the global landscape will render these centres unnecessary for the functioning of the global economy, and which cities are likely to emerge as hubs of new financial technology.