
In Gaining Currency, Leading China Scholar Eswar S. Prasad Describes How The Renminbi (rmb) Is Taking The World By Storm And Explains Its Role In Reshaping Global Finance. This Book Sets The Recent Rise Of The Rmb, China's Currency Since 1949, Against A Sweeping Historical Backdrop. China Issued The World's First Paper Currency In The 7th Century. In The 13th Century, Kublai Khan Issued The First-ever Currency To Circulate Widely Despite Not Being Backed By Commodities Or Precious Metals. China Also Experienced Some Of The Earliest Episodes Of Hyperinflation Currency Wars. Gaining Currency Reveals The Interconnections Linking China's Growing Economic Might, Its Expanding International Influence, And The Rise Of Its Currency. If China Plays Its Cards Right By Adopting Reforms That Put Its Economy And Financial Markets On The Right Track, The Rmb Could Rival Even The Euro And The Japanese Yen. Prasad Shows, However, That While China Has Successfully Adopted A Unique Playbook For Promoting The Rmb, Many Pitfalls Lie Ahead For Its Economy And Currency That Could Limit The Rmb's Ascendance. The Chinese Leadership Is Pursuing Financial Liberalization And Limited Market-oriented Reforms, But It Has Unequivocally Repudiated Political, Legal, And Institutional Reforms. Therefore, Prasad Argues, While The Rmb Is Likely To Become A Significant Reserve Currency, It Will Not Attain Safe Haven Status As A Currency To Which Investors Turn During Crises. In Short, The Hype Predicting The Rmb's Inevitable Rise To Global Dominance Is Overblown. Gaining Currency Makes A Compelling Case That, For All Its Promise, The Rmb Does Not Pose A Serious Challenge To The U.s. Dollar's Dominance In International Finance.
This book investigates the trajectory of the Chinese Renminbi (RMB) and evaluates whether it possesses the structural capacity to challenge the U.S. dollar as the world's dominant reserve currency. Eswar S. Prasad, a senior professor at Cornell University and former head of the IMF's China Division, utilizes historical economic data and contemporary financial analysis to construct his argument. He posits that while the RMB is gaining international traction, China's refusal to implement necessary political and institutional reforms will ultimately prevent the currency from achieving true safe-haven status.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in international finance frequently cite this work as a balanced, sober counter-narrative to the hyperbolic claims regarding the RMB's inevitable global dominance. Readers often note the academic rigor of the prose, which provides a clear-eyed assessment of the institutional barriers facing the Chinese economy.
Page Count:
208
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190631066
ISBN-13:
9780190631062
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