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China’s Struggle to Slow

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BEIJING – At the opening of the annual session of China’s parliament, the National People’s Congress (NPC), Premier Wen Jiabao announced that the government’s target for annual economic growth in 2012 was 7.5%. With the global economy still struggling to recover, Wen’s announcement of such a significant dip in China’s growth rate naturally sparked widespread concern around the world.

The Reserve Bank of India : Pulling Every Lever

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20111128PHT32600_original.jpg ONE of the perks of being governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is the use of a colonial bungalow on Carmichael Road, a posh street that weaves along a ridge in south Mumbai.

Why India is Riskier than China

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Why India is Riskier than China NEW HAVEN – Today, fears are growing that China and India are about to be the next victims of the ongoing global economic carnage. This would have enormous consequences. Asia’s developing and newly industrialized economies grew at an 8.5% average annual rate over 2010-11 – nearly triple the 3% growth elsewhere in the world. If China and India are next to fall, Asia would be at risk, and it would be hard to avoid a global recession.

The China Bear’s Feeble Growl

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China_flags.jpg BEIJING -- In recent months, bearish sentiment about the Chinese economy has surged, owing largely to three conjectures.

Many Rich Chenese Consider Leaving

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BEIJING—More than half of China's millionaires are either considering emigrating or have already taken steps to do so, according to a survey that builds on similar findings earlier this year, highlighting worries among the business elite about their quality of life and financial prospects, despite the country's fast-paced growth.

Ten Reasons Why China is Different

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china.jpg Stephen S. Roach, a member of the faculty at Yale University, is Non-Executive Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia and author of The Next Asia.

Japan: The Sun Will Rise Again

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the_sun_will_rise_again.jpg TOKYO – In Japan, memorial services for the dead are normally held 49 days after their passing. The bereaved mourn throughout this period. The number of victims of the earthquake and tsunami that assaulted the Tohoku region of northeast Japan has now reached around 30,000, if those who are still missing are included. This was the largest natural disaster to strike Japan in its history, and the entire nation has been in mourning.

Japan faces challenges as it begins to rebuild

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japan-recovery Japan faces a tremendous challenge as it seeks to recover from the effects of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The most immediate challenge, of course, is the containment of radiation leaks from the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant. But ripples from the disaster will continue for some time, and Japan's recovery from the worst natural disaster in the nation's history will be costly and long.

China’s Revealing Five-Year Priorities

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will_chinas_inflation_hurt_us_markets_study_says_no.jpg What's going well, what's not, and where to from here are the hot topics of conversation in China this week at the National People's Congress. Every five years, the government reviews the progress of the past five-year economic plan, and debates and affirms the plan for the next five years. In three separate reports delivered to the entire Congress of about three thousand representatives, the government leadership establishes the broad outlines of the budget and its economic priorities. This time around, the five-year work plan is striking for several reasons: the high degree of continuity from five years ago, the push by Beijing for Chinese companies to assert themselves globally, the strong hand of the state in areas of the economy considered integral to social stability, and the potential for serious debate over several of the redistributive aspects of the plan.

Conundrum for Hot Asian Economies

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asian-economy.jpg SINGAPORE — At first glance, short-term economic prospects for Asia are positive: Economies are expected to continue to grow steadily this year, albeit at a slightly slower pace than in 2010, making the region a darling in the eyes of international investors, who are desperately looking for improved corporate earnings and higher returns on stocks.

Dependence on China: The Indispensable Economy ?

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Export_to_China_thumb.gif THE town of Alpha in Queensland, Australia, has only 400 residents, including one part-time ambulance driver and a lone policeman, according to Mark Imber of Waratah Coal, an exploration firm. But over the next few years it should quintuple in size, thanks to an A$7.5 billion ($7.3 billion) investment by his company and the Metallurgical Corporation of China, a state-owned firm that serves China’s mining and metals industry.

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