The Digital Financial Revolution in China
By (Author) David Dollar
Edited by Yiping Huang
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Brookings Institution
10th May 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Banking
Corporate finance
338.951
Paperback
280
Width 154mm, Height 223mm, Spine 25mm
481g
Describing how China is in the lead in transforming finance for the digital age
China has been at the forefront of one of the most important revolutions in contemporary business practices: the rapid growth of digital finance. From mobile payments to online investment, from Big Tech lending to digital insurance, and from open banking to central bank digital currency, China has been among the most advancedsometimes the most advancedof the major economies in adopting technologies that are changing both the financial system and the lives of millions of people.
China has been especially far-sighted in promoting financial inclusionoffering financial services for the first time to people regardless of their location, job status, or income.
This book is the product of a joint research project between economists at the National School of Development, especially the affiliated Institute of Digital Finance, at Peking University and at the Brookings Institution. It investigates the impact of financial technology on job creation, income distribution, and consumer welfare in China. It also examines larger systemic issues such as monetary policy, stability of the banking sector, and international trade and payments.
With a primary focus on the development of digital finance in China, most of the contributions are from Chinese economists. But the volume also considers implications for the rest of the world in several chapters written by international economists from Brookings.
The depth and breadth of the descriptions and analysis in this ground-breaking book will appeal to scholars of China, finance professionals, and policymakers around the globe.
To be sure, this book is a very timely contribution to our understanding of the fintech sector in China. It maps out the development trajectories of a broad range of fintech categories, from payment and loans to investment and wealth management. In the meantime, it provides a rich set of data sources and metrics for evaluating the fintech economy. If the innovators and regulators in China have enabled the world's largest and fastest-changing fintech market, this book includes some of the most significant models and lessons drawn from this arena. It is thus a valuable reference for financial innovation in the global context.
-- "China Quarterly"David Dollar is a senior fellow in the China Center at the Brookings Institution and host of the Dollar & Sense podcast on international trade. His most recent book is China 2049. From 2009 to 2013 he represented the U.S. Treasury in Beijing. Prior to that, Dollar worked 20 years at the World Bank.Yiping Huang is the Director of the Institute of Digital Finance and deputy dean of the National School of Development, at the Peking University. He was formerly member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the People's Bank of China and chief Asia economist for Citigroup.