2007
DOI: 10.1596/1813-9450-4132
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The International Financial Integration Of China And India

Abstract: Three main features characterize the international financial integration of China and India. First, while only having a small global share of privately-held external assets and liabilities (with the exception of China's FDI liabilities), these countries are large holders of official reserves. Second, their international balance sheets are highly asymmetric: both are "short equity, long debt." Third, China and India have improved their net external positions over the last decade although, based on their level o… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
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“…But there is also independent evidence of these differing portfolio preferences. In a detailed analysis of the net asset positions of China and India, for example, economists Lane and Schmukler (2006) show that the net investment positions of both are essentially 'short equity, long debt'. Particularly following the 1997 Asian crisis, an increasing share of emerging economies' savings were channelled into foreign exchange reserves held in the form of developedeconomy government bonds.…”
Section: Explaining the Rise In The Erpmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But there is also independent evidence of these differing portfolio preferences. In a detailed analysis of the net asset positions of China and India, for example, economists Lane and Schmukler (2006) show that the net investment positions of both are essentially 'short equity, long debt'. Particularly following the 1997 Asian crisis, an increasing share of emerging economies' savings were channelled into foreign exchange reserves held in the form of developedeconomy government bonds.…”
Section: Explaining the Rise In The Erpmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, rapid trade growth in Asia has been supported by large investment flows (see Eichengreen andTong, 2005, andLane andSchmukler, 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, a sudden and severe capital flight could inflict huge pains on an economythe recent crises abound with examples of the detrimental impact of capital flight. See, for example, Blanchard and Giavazz (2006), Cheung et al (2007a, b), Feenstra and Wei (2009), Lane and Schmukler (2007), Obstfeld (2006), and Rodrik (2006).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%