Contributors
Cai Fang (蔡昉)
Cai Fang is Academician and Vice President of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). He attended China Renmin University, Graduate School of CASS and received his PhD degree in Economics. He served as Director of Institute of Population and Labor Economics of CASS for 16 years before 2014. He has been visiting scholar to universities and institutions such as University of Washington, Australian National University, Stanford University, and World Institute of Development Economics of UN University.
He also serves as a member of the Standing Committee and Vice Chairman of the Committee of Agricultural and Rural Work of the 13th National People’s Congress. He also serves as adviser for several government ministries and provincial governments. He edits the Chinese journal of Studies of Labor Economics and serves as member of editorial boards for academic journals such as Social Sciences in China, Economic Studies.
His research focuses on theoretical and policy issues about China’s agriculture, labor, population, reform, growth, and poverty. Cai Fang was awarded several important awards in Economics in China, such as the Zhang Peigang Development Economics Prize and the Sun Yefang Economics Prize.
His publications include China’s Economy: Reform and Development (McGraw-Hill, 2009, coauthored); Transforming the Chinese Economy, 1978–2008 (Brill, 2010, edited); China’s Population and Labor Issues Report (Brill, serial books, edited); China’s Economic Growth Prospects: From Demographic Dividend To Reform Dividend (Edward Elgar, 2016); Demystifying China’s Economy Development (Springer-Verlag, 2015).
Du Yan (杜艳)
Du Yan is a lecturer of Business School, Sichuan Agricultural University. She received her PhD degree from the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in 2017. She has been visiting scholar to University of Arizona.
Du Yan has published research articles in China & World Economy, Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, and others. Her research interests are industrial organization, applied microeconomics, outward foreign direct investment, etc.
Guan Tao (管涛)
Guan Tao, senior fellow at China Finance 40 Forum (CF40) since 2015, was director general of the department of balance of payments at the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) during 2009–2015 and press spokesperson of the SAFE during 2014–2015. Prior to that, Dr. Guan functioned as deputy director general of the general affairs department of the SAFE. He is also member of G50 Economists and Dong Fureng Chair Professor of Wuhan University.
Dr. Guan participated in a series of foreign exchange reform projects during 1994–2014. His major research areas include exchange rate policies, international capital flows, currency convertibility and balance of payments. He received a Ph.D. in economics from Beijing Normal University in 2004, a master’s degree in development economics from Australian National University in 1998 and a bachelor’s degree in world economics from Wuhan University in 1992.
Selected Publications of Guan Tao:
“Seizing China’s Opportunity: From the Perspective of Global Economic Rebalancing”, China Economic Publishing House, 2010
“The Nature of Exchange Rate”, China CITIC Press, 2016
“The Game of Exchange Rate Policy: Renminbi and the Rising Power”, China CITIC Press, 2017
Hong Junjie (洪俊杰)
Ph.D. (2005) in economics, National University of Singapore. He is Leading Researcher in Philosophy and Social Sciences of Ten Thousand Talent Program(2018), Chinses Most Cited Researchers(2017), Special Professor of the Yangtze River Scholar(2016), Chief Expert of Major Projects of The National Social Science Fund of China, member of the Advisory committee of International Trade Policy of the Ministry of Commerce of China, Vice President of China Branch of Institute of International Trade and Finance, Under-Secretary-General of National International Trade Subject Collaboration Group of China. Dr. Hong was Executive Editor of Journal of Chinese Economic and Foreign Trade Studies (2008–2010). His main research interests include International Trade, Regional Economics, International Business, Innovation.
Selected Publications of Hong Junjie:
“Geographic Dispersion and Co-location in Global R&D Portfolios”, Research Policy, 2018.
“Internationalization and innovation performance of emerging market enterprises”, Journal of World Business, 2016/02.
“The role of the state in explaining the internationalization of emerging market enterprises”, British Journal of Management, 2015.
“Exploring the role of government involvement in outward FDI from emerging economies”, Journal of International Business Studies, 2012/09.
“What Drives the Internationalization of Chinese Firms? Testing the Explanatory Power of Three Theoretical Frameworks”, International Business Review, 2012.
Huang Yiping (黄益平)
Huang Yiping is a Professor at the National School of Economics and Director of the Institute of Digital Finance at the Peking University. He obtained his PhD in Economics from the Australian National University. His current research focuses on financial reform and digital finance. He was a former member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the People’s Bank of China and is currently a Research Fellow of the Financial Research Center at the Councilor’s Office of the State Council of China and a member of the IMF’s external advisory group on Surveillance. He is also the editor of China Economic Journal and an associate editor of Asian Economic Policy Review. Previously, he worked as a policy analyst at the Research Center for Rural Development of the State Council of China, a senior lecturer at the Australian National University and the chief Asia economist at Citigroup.
Selected Publications of Huang Yiping:
Yang Ji, Wenlong Bian and Yiping Huang, “Deposit insurance, bank exit and spillover effects”, Journal of Banking and Finance, Volume 16(November 2018): 268–276.
Qin Gou, Yiping Huang and Jianguo Xu, “Does ownership matter in access to bank credit in China?”, European Journal of Finance, 2018, 24(16): 1409–1427.
Yiping Huang and Xu Wang, “Building an efficient financial system in China: A need for stronger market disciplines”, Asian Economic Policy Review, 2017, 12(2): 188–205.
Yiping Huang and Xun Wang, “Does financial repression inhibit or facilitate economic growth: a case study of China’s reform experience”, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, December 2011, 73(6): 833–855.
Yiping Huang, “Dissecting the China puzzle: Asymmetric liberalization and cost distortion”, Asian Economic Policy Review, 2010, 5(2): 281–295.
Ju Jiandong (鞠建东)
Ju Jiandong, Unigroup Chair Professor at the PBC School of Finance at Tsinghua University, Chang Jiang Scholar of the Chinese Ministry of Education. After receiving his doctorate in Economics from Pennsylvania State University in 1995, he served as assistant, associate and full professor at University of Oklahoma and professor at School of Economics and Management in Tsinghua University. He was the Dean of International School of Business Administration, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics from 2014–2017. He was a resident scholar in International Monetary Fund, and consulted for World Bank and other policy organizations. He focused his research on International Trade, International Finance and Industrial Organization, and the main teaching courses are Advanced International Trade and Finance. His work has been published in American Economic Review, Journal of International Economics, Journal of Monetary Economics, American Economic Journal and other journals.
Li Feng (黎峰)
Dr. Li Feng is Postdoctoral candidate of School of Economics, Nankai University, and Researcher in the Institute of World Economy of Jiangsu Academy of Social Sciences.
Liu Lipin (刘立品)
graduated as a postgraduate in the major of World Economics from Nankai University. She is research associate of China Finance 40 Forum. Her main research interests include International Finance, World Economy.
Liu Shouying (刘守英)
Prof. Liu graduated from the Department of Economics at Fudan University (1985). He is now the Professor of School of Economics at Renmin University of China, Vice President of China International Association for Urban and Rural Development and Vice President of China Association of Rural Property Rights. He has a wealth of overseas research experiences. He was the visiting scholar of University of Wisconsin (1994–1995) and Harvard University (2015). Liu was Vice Minister of Ministry of Rural Economic Research in Development Research Center of the State Council (2010–2015) and the Speaker at 31th Group study of Political Bureau of the 17th CPC Central Committee, President and Editor-in-Chief of China Economic Times (2015–2016). In 2016, he came to Renmin University of China for teaching and research. Professor Liu is a prolific writer and a regular participant in academic and policy debates. His main research interests include land system, urban-rural integration, manufacture upgrading which all pertain to development economics and institutional economics.
Selected Publications of Liu Shouying:
“Land system Reform and Economic Development in China”, China Renmin University Press, 2018/10
“The structure and changes of China’s land system”, China Agricultural Economic Review, 2018/07
“Historical Transformation of China’s Agriculture: Productivity Changes and Other Key Features”, China & World Economy, 2018/01
“Investigation on China’s Land Issues: Land Rights from the Civilian Perspective”, Peking University Press, 2017/12
“Dimensions and diversity of property rights in rural China: Dilemmas on the road to further reform”, World Development, 1998/10
Lu Yi (陆毅)
Lu Yi is a professor of School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University. He received his PhD degree from Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Hong Kong in 2007. Before joining the Tsinghua University, he was a research assistant professor in Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Hong Kong, and an assistant professor and an associate professor (with tenure) in Department of Economics, National University of Singapore.
Professor Lu Yi is the director of Tsinghua University-The University of Chicago Joint Research Center for Economics and Finance, and the director of Center for Tsinghua SEM International Economic Research. He also serves as the deputy director of Tsinghua NBS Data Research Center and Tsinghua China Data Center.
Professor Lu Yi also serves as the deputy secretary-general of China University International Trade Discipline Collaboration Group Youth Forum. He is the associate editor for Journal of Comparative Economics, China & World Economy, and China Journal of Economics (in Chinese).
Professor Lu Yi’s research interests are international trade and Chinese economy. He was awarded the An Zijie International Trade Research Prize. He has published more than ten research articles in top international journals: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of International Economics, Journal of Labor Economics, Journal of Development Economics, Journal of Urban Economics, etc. He has also published more than ten research articles in top Chinese journals: Economic Research Journal, Management World, etc.
Miao Yanliang (缪延亮)
Miao Yanliang is Ph.D. in economics, Director of Research at the Investment Center, State Administration of Foreign Exchange.
Shang Hui (商辉)
Ph.D. Candidate in economics, University of International Business and Economics. Her main research interests include International Trade, Global Value Chain.
Sheng Bin (盛斌)
Dr. Sheng Bin is the “Cheung Kong Scholar” professor at the Institute of International Economics, Nankai and University, and senior research fellow of the Center for Transnationals’ Study and APEC Study Center, Nankai University. He is also the dean of School of Economics, Nankai University, and director of China APEC Academy. He is assuming the vice secretary of China’s Society of World Economy, vice secretary of China’s University Association of International Trade Studies, vice chairman of China’s Society of American Economy, executive editor of International Trade Studies, vice chief-editor of Nankai Economic Studies and other academic positions. He was senior visiting scholar of the U.S. Fulbright Foundation at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington, D.C. during 2008–2009 and visiting scholar EU-China Higher Education Cooperation Program during 1999–2000.
Xu Qiyuan (徐奇渊)
holds a doctor’s degree from Northeast Normal University (China) in 2008, senior fellow of IWEP (Institute of World Economics and Politics), CASS (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences). In 2012, he also took up the role of advisor to the international collaboration department in Ministry of Finance of PRC. Xu also sits in the work team of CEEM (China’s External Economic Environment) in IWEP. This work team issues a quarterly report on global macroeconomics, and he is responsible for the research on China and RMB issues. Qiyuan has been a visiting fellow at CIGI (2014), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (2014), Bruegel (2013), Hitotsubashi University (2009), and the Institute of International Monetary Affairs (IIMA) at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (2011).
Selected Publications of Xu Qiyuan:
Xu, Qiyuan, China Development Bank(2018), Born Bankrupt, Born Shaper, in “The Future of National Development Banks”, edited by Stephany Griffith-Jones and José Antonio Ocampo, Oxford University PRESS, pp. 39–62.
Xu, Qiyuan(2016), Reform directions for China’s Socialist market economy: a macroeconomic perspective, in “China’s Socialist Rule of Law Reforms under Xi Jinping”, edited by John Garrick and Yan Chang Bennett, Routledge contemporary China series, Routledge, pp. 59–74.
Xu, Qiyuan and Sun Jingying (2015). “The United Nations Development Agenda and China’s Role”, World Economics and Politics (Chinese), No. 4, pp. 43–66.
Xu, Qiyuan and Chen Sichong (2014). “Impacts of Sino-Japan’s tension on the bilateral trade”, Quarterly Journal of International Politics (in Chinese), pp. 1–23, No. 1.
Yu Xinding (余心玎)
Yu Xinding, associate professor of economics in the School of International Trade and Economics, University of International Business and Economics. She got her Ph.D. in economics from Tsinghua University in 2014. Dr. Yu’s research mainly focuses on international trade and global value chains. Her work has been published in Journal of Comparative Economics, China & World Economy, etc.
Yu Yongding (余永定)
Ph.D. (1994) in economics, the University of Oxford, is the First Academician of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (International Studies). He is member of the Advisory Committee of National Planning of the National Development and Reform Committee of the People’s Republic of China; member of the Advisory committee of Foreign Policy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China. Dr. Yu was Director-General of the Institute of World Economics and Politics (IWEP), CASS (1998–2009); President of the China Society of World Economy (2003–2011); and member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the People’s Bank of China (2004–2006); His main research interests include macroeconomic, International Finance, World Economy.
Selected Publications of Yu Yongding:
“The Current RMB Exchange Rate Volatility and RMB Internationalization”, International Economic Review, 2012/01.
“Witness Imbalances—Twin Surpluses, Renminbi Exchange Rate and the Dollar Trap”, International Economic Review, 2010/03.
“From European Sovereign Debt Crisis to a Possible Global Sovereign Debt”, International Economic Review, 2010/06.
“The Nature, Causes and Solutions of the Double Surplus in China”, The Journal of World Economy, 2006/03.
“On the Derivation of Aggregate Supply Curve by Integration”, Economic Research Journal, 2002/09.
Zhang Antian (张岸天)
has been a research associate at the CF40 since 2016. Zhang works with Senior Fellow Guan Tao on a variety of subjects in international capital flows, international trade and China’s financial stability. Zhang received a master’s degree in international affairs with a concentration on economic and political development from Columbia University and a bachelor’s degree in applied mathematics from Wuhan University.
Zhang Bin (张斌)
The head of department of global macroeconomics at Institute of World Economics and Politics (IWEP), Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). His Main research areas are exchange rate and international balance of payment, regional monetary cooperation, China’s macroeconomic volatility. He received doctor degree in Department of World Economics and Politics, Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in 2003. He had the former visiting scholar at Harvard University Center for International Development in Sep. 2006–2007. He had the former visiting researcher in UNCTAD Secretariat in Jan.–Apr., 2005.
Selected Publications of Zhang Bin:
“An Analysis of Factors Influencing the Fluctuation of Nominal and Real Returns on China’s Foreign Exchange Reserves”, Social Sciences in China, 2012/01.
“Should Asian Economies Hold More Asian Assets in Their Foreign Exchange Reserves—Answer from China”, Studies of International Finance, 2011/03.
“RMB Exchange Rate Reform: A Trade-off Solution”, International Economic Review, 2010/01.
“Is ACU Attractive to East Asia Economies? The Case of China”, World Economy and China, Vol. 3, 2006.
“The Consequences of Currency Appreciation: A Theoretical Model Based on Chinese Stylized Facts”, Economic Research Journal, 2006/05.
“Large Foreign Exchange Reserves and China’s Internal and External Economic Imbalances”, International Economic Review, 2006/03.
“China’s production sectors: history, challenges and required reforms”, World Economy and China, vol. 6, 2005.
“RMB’s Real Exchange Rate: Concept, Measurement and Decomposition”, China Economic Quarterly, 2005/03.
Zhou Qiren (周其仁)
Zhou Qiren is a Chair Professor of Peking University. He served as Dean of National School of Development at Peking University during 2008–2012. He received his B.A. in Economics from Renmin University of China in 1982. Then he served at the Rural Development Research Center of the State Council led by Du Runsheng, engaged in investigation and research on China’s rural reform, diversity of regional development, and China’s economic structure. In 1989, he visited and studied at University of Oxford, University of Colorado, and University of Chicago, and then in 1990 enrolled in graduate program at University of California Los Angeles where he received his Ph.D. in (Economic) History. He has been on the faculty of Peking University since 1996. In his early years, he had been served as a farmer worker in Heilongjiang for 10 years.
He also serves as a member of 13th Five-Year Plan Expert Committee of National Development and Reform Commission, a member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the People’s Bank of China, a member of the Expert Committee of the State Council on Healthcare Reform, and a member of Experts Committee on National Policies for Urban Development in China.
His research focuses on property rights and contracts, institutions in economic change, monopoly and regulation, firms and market organization, monetary policy, land reform and urbanization, etc. He was awarded the Sun Yefang Economic Prize.
His publications in Chinese include Logic of Reform 改革的逻辑 (revised edition, CITIC Press, 2017); Property Right and China’s Transformation 产权与中国变革 (CITIC Press, 2017); Breakthrough—Seeking New Impetus of Reform 突围集—寻找改革新动力 (CITIC Press 2017); Urban and Rural China 城乡中国 (revised edition, CITIC Press 2017); Competition and Prosperity: China’s Telecom Industry Economic Review 竞争与繁荣—中国电信业金华的经济评论 (CITIC Press, 2013); Essays of Exchange Rate and Money 货币的教训 (Peking University Press, 2012); What China Has Done Right—The Unfolding of Deng’s Drama 中国做对了什么 (Peking University Press, 2010); Essays of Medical Care Reforms in China 病有所医当问谁 (Peking University Press, 2008); Behind Phenomena, Reviews on China’s Economic Growth 世事胜棋局 (Peking University Press, 2007); Income is a Chain of Events 收入是一连串事件(Peking University Press, 2006); The Economics of the Real World 真实世界的经济学 (Peking University Press, 2006); Looking at the Sword under the Lamp—Observing the Great Economic Era 挑灯看剑—观察经济大时代 (Peking University Press, 2006).
Zhu Min (朱民)
Zhu Min is Chair of national institute of financial research, Tsinghua University.
He graduated from Fudan University with a bachelor’s degree in Economics in 1982, and gained a master’s degree in MPA from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and a PhD in economics and an M.A. in economics from Johns Hopkins University.
Zhu Min is a Chinese economist and former Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund from 2011–2016. He was Special Advisor to the Managing Director of International Monetary Fund from 2010–2011. Zhu has held senior positions Bank of China from 2003 to 2009 and was a Deputy Governor of the People’s Bank of China from 2009 to 2010.
He has published extensively on a wide range of macroeconomic management, financial regulation and supervision, and financial market issues. He is a guest lecturer at several university graduate schools, and a frequent speaker at major global economic forums.
Zou Jingxian (邹静娴)
Assistant professor at National Academy of Development and Strategy, Renmin University of China. Her main research areas are structural change, exchange rate regime and current account imbalance. She received doctor degree in National School of Development (NSD, also known as China Center for Economic Research, CCER), Peking University in 2017. She had the former visiting scholar at Department of Economics, University of Chicago in Sep. 2015–2016. She had the former assistant analyst at World Bank (Beijing Office) in Jan.–Jun.,2017.
Selected Publications of Zou Jingxian:
“The Labor Force Age Structure and Employment Structure of the Modern Sector”, China Economic Review, 5, 2018.
“How Labor Share Responds to Uncertainty? Evidence from Chinese Industry Firms”, International Labour Review, 2018-8-6.
“China’s Economic Transformation: Progress and Gaps”, International Economic Review (Chinese), 6, 2018.
“Can Producer Services Boost Manufacturing Growth: Evidence from China’s De-regulation”, Economics of Transition, forthcoming.
“The Effect of Value-added Tax on Leverage: Evidence from China’s Value-added Tax Reform”, China Economic Review, forthcoming.
“On Sino-US Trade Friction from the Perspective of Long-term Economic Growth”, International Economic Review (Chinese), forthcoming.
“Undervaluation, Financial Development and Economic Growth”, Asian Development Review, 34 (1), 2017.
“Upgrading of China’s Manufacturing from the Perspective of Trade”, International Economic Review (Chinese), 3, 2017.
“Economic Growth Difference, Life-cycle Hypothesis and ‘Allocation Puzzle’”, Economic Research (Chinese), 3, 2016.
“Is the Phillips Curve valid in China?”, Frontiers of Economics in China, 10 (2), 2015.