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13 result(s) for "Beardson, Timothy"
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China needs a culture of creative innovation
[...]a recent European Chamber of Commerce in China paper has shown that the number of invention patents, which represent innovative advances, is substantially lower than the number of utility patents, which represent incremental adjustments. [...]there are a worrying number of malicious patent grants that appear to be aimed at litigation gains.
China needs a culture of creative innovation
[...]a recent European Chamber of Commerce in China paper has shown that the number of invention patents, which represent innovative advances, is substantially lower than the number of utility patents, which represent incremental adjustments. [...]there are a worrying number of malicious patent grants that appear to be aimed at litigation gains.
China needs a culture of innovation
[...]a recent European Chamber of Commerce in China paper has shown that the number of invention patents, which represent innovative advances, is substantially lower than the number of utility patents, which represent incremental adjustments. [...]there are a worrying number of malicious patent grants that appear to be aimed at litigation gains. A partner in the US consultancy Booz and Co said in April that \"the industrial policy of trying to build up a capable, competent, world-class Chinese automotive industry has been in place for decades and it has essentially failed.\"
Don't Count on China to Bail Out the U.S
As much of China's holding of U.S. Treasurys is financed by issuing higher-interest debt to domestic investors, China incurs losses estimated to be $66 billion annually, according to the Peterson Institute study, \"The Internal Cost of China's Currency Policy.\" The renminbi, China's currency, has been steadily rising against the dollar since 2005 -- by 33% from mid-2005 until 2013. Every upward movement in the Chinese currency creates a capital loss on Beijing's holdings in U.S. dollars. These are uncomfortable circumstances for China to be invested in Treasurys. Nor is Beijing's financial position as strong as is often suggested. Its ratio of tax revenue to total GDP is one of the lowest of any major country. The ratio of total government revenue to GDP in 2011 was an estimated 34% in the U.S., 52% in France and 23% in China. The Chinese state extracted a smaller share of the country's GDP than any other significant country.
Don't Count on China to Bail Out the U.S
As much of China's holding of U.S. Treasurys is financed by issuing higher-interest debt to domestic investors, China incurs losses estimated to be $66 billion annually, according to the Peterson Institute study, \"The Internal Cost of China's Currency Policy.\" The renminbi, China's currency, has been steadily rising against the dollar since 2005 -- by 33% from mid-2005 until 2013. Every upward movement in the Chinese currency creates a capital loss on Beijing's holdings in U.S. dollars. These are uncomfortable circumstances for China to be invested in Treasurys. Nor is Beijing's financial position as strong as is often suggested. Its ratio of tax revenue to total GDP is one of the lowest of any major country. The ratio of total government revenue to GDP in 2011 was an estimated 34% in the U.S., 52% in France and 23% in China. The Chinese state extracted a smaller share of the country's GDP than any other significant country.
Don't Count on China to Bail Out the U.S.Beijing's net investment in U.S. Treasurys over the past two years is essentially zero
China's holdings of U.S. Treasury securities in November 2012 were barely more than those of Japan and represented just over 7% of total U.S. public debt. [...]the rate of interest that Beijing is getting on its on its Treasury holdings--0.33%, according to an estimate in a study published by the Peterson Institute for International Economics--is well below its estimated 2.13% domestic cost of borrowing at home in China.
Don't Count on China to Bail Out the U.S
China's holdings of U.S. Treasury securities in November 2012 were barely more than those of Japan and represented just over 7% of total U.S. public debt. [...]the rate of interest that Beijing is getting on its on its Treasury holdings --