Last week, Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics Nicholas R. Lardy published an article on the website of Foreign Affairs titled “China Is Still Rising—Don’t Underestimate the World’s Second-Biggest Economy”. It mentioned that U.S. academics’ recent view of C...
" Nicholas Lardy, a nonresident senior fellow at the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE), wrote in an April 2 article in Foreign Affairs titled "China is still rising".
Nicholas Lardy:Probably the most significant growth area for consumption in China is in services, particularly healthcare, which saw a substantial increase in 2023. There was likely a pent-up demand for healthcare services during the lockdown periods when people may have struggled to secure medical...
China in the World Economy, Nicholas R. Lardy, Institute for International Economics, Washington, DC, 1994. xi + 147, index, $16.95doi:10.1006/jcec.1995.1032Jan PrybylaJournal of Comparative Economics
NicholasLardy:Yes, I think expectations on US interest rates have been in flux over the last few months. There has been a very large gap between the interest rates in China and the US, which I think is likely to diminish starting in the latter part of this year and continuing into 2025...
Today, we're joined by esteemed economist Nicholas Lardy, a prominent voice on matters of internatio “特别声明:以上作品内容(包括在内的视频、图片或音频)为凤凰网旗下自媒体平台“大风号”用户上传并发布,本平台仅提供信息存储空间服务。 Notice: The content above (including the videos, pictures and aud...
NicholasLardy:Yes, I think expectations on US interest rates have been in flux over the last few months. There has been a very large gap between the interest rates in China and the US, which I think is likely to diminish starting in the latter part of this year and continuing into 2025...
6. Source: "Foreign corporates investing in China surged in 2021," Peterson Institute for International Economics. Tianlei Huang (PIIE) and Nicholas R. Lardy (PIIE). March 29, 2022.
doi:10.1016/0306-9192(86)90069-2ELSEVIERFood Policy
While it is now widely understood that China was the first globally significant economy to begin to recover from the crisis, critics nonetheless increasingly chdoi:10.2139/ssrn.2126176Nicholas R. LardyPeterson Institute for International EconomicsSocial Science Electronic Publishing...