Chapter 1. Processing Trade, Trade Liberalisation, and Opening Up: China’s Miracle of International Trade.- Chapter 2. Import, Firm Productivity, and Product Complexity.- Chapter 3. Trade Liberalization, Product Complexity, and Productivity Improvement: Evidence from Chinese Firms. - Chapter 4. Processing Trade, Export Intensity, and Input Trade Liberalization: Evidence from Chinese Firms.- Chapter 5. Processing Trade, Tariff Reductions, and Firm Productivity: Evidence from Chinese Firms.- Chapter 6. Firm R&D, Processing Trade and Input Trade Liberalisation: Evidence from Chinese Firms.- Chapter 7. Input Trade Liberalization and Import Switching.- Chapter 8. Trade Liberalisation and Chinese Exports: Sourcing from the South.- Chapter 9. Measured Skill Premia and Trade Liberalization: Evidence from Chinese Firms.- Chapter 10. All-Around Trade Liberalization and Firm-Level Employment: Theory and Evidence from China.
Professor Miaojie Yu is Boya Chair Professor and Deputy Dean of National School of Development (NSD), Peking University. He is Chang-Jiang Scholar of Ministry of Education of China and is awarded as China’s National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars. He is the world's top 1% of highly cited economists in economics and management. He has published more than 150 peer-reviewed papers and 22 books in English and Chinese and won the prize of Royal Economic Society (2015).
Professor Wei Tian is an tenured-associate professor of School of Economics at Peking University at China. She has published in the top peer-reviewed academic journals like The Economic Journal and won the Anzijie Research Award in International Trade (China).
This book focuses on input trade liberalization in China and discusses the underlying causes and profound effects of Chinese enterprises facing import liberalization of intermediate input. The content of this book includes ten chapters. The analysis of this book mainly uses academic research, with policy study for a few chapters. Most chapters in this book apply the standard method of contemporary economic systems, integrating into the most advanced economic theories of international trade. The author uses theoretical models to obtain predictions which receive empirical support and carries out strict empirical research using data of China's manufacturing enterprises and China's customs to analyze the causes which affect Chinese enterprises facing import liberalization of intermediate input after China’s reform and opening-up.
The suggested readership would be the public who are willing to understand the issues closely related to China’s input trade liberalization and opening-up policy, and basic knowledge in economics would be necessary in understanding the academic research part of the book. Meanwhile, this book is also specifically compelling to business persons and policy makers in that it enables deeper understanding on issues about outward foreign investment of enterprises and China’s opening-up policy and facilitates their decision-making process.