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Between Confrontation and Assimilation: China and the fragmentation of global financial governance

Cited 10 time in Web of Science Cited 16 time in Scopus
Authors

Sohn, Injoo

Issue Date
2013-07
Publisher
Taylor&Francis
Citation
JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY CHINA, Vol.22 No.82, pp.630-648
Abstract
This article explains China's multilateral approach towards regional and global financial institutions in the early twenty-first century. Challenging the dichotomous views of eventual assimilation' and systemic conflict', the article argues that China's strategic behavior suggests neither one-way assimilation into an American-centered liberal order nor a collision course with the United States and its Group of Seven (G-7) allies. China seems intent on exploring both global and regional options lest it should limit the range of strategic options available to itself. China has been pursuing a risk-averse counterweight strategy, that is, developing regional financial institutions and thereby avoiding overdependence on G-7-centered global institutions while maintaining collaborative relations with those global institutions. Such behavior will facilitate the emergence of a more fragmented and multilayered form of global financial governance in the post-global crisis world.
ISSN
1067-0564
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/148578
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/10670564.2013.766384
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