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  • 11-octobre-2017

    Français

    Gouvernance d’entreprise et performance des entreprises en Chine

    La gouvernance d’entreprise est l’une des principales priorités de la Chine au cours de la période de « nouvelle normalité », durant laquelle les rendements sur investissement fléchissent.

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  • 4-octobre-2017

    Français

    Les transferts gouvernementaux réduisent-ils la pauvreté en Chine? Ce que disent les données micro dans cinq régions

    Ce document estime les taux de pauvreté urbaine et rurale dans cinq régions administratives chinoises (Shanghai, Liaoning, Guangdong, Henan et Gansu) en 2014 en utilisant les données représentatives des ménages tirées du sondage China Family Panel Studies.

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  • 11-septembre-2017

    Français

    Partager les fruits de la croissance de la Chine en offrant des opportunités à tous

    Les niveaux de vie en Chine se sont considérablement améliorés au cours des dernières décennies.

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  • 11-septembre-2017

    Français

    Renforcer le dynamisme des entreprises en Chine et améliorer leurs résultats

    Compte tenu de l'atonie persistante de la croissance au niveau mondial et en Chine, des surcapacités observées dans certaines industries lourdes, du recul de la rentabilité des entreprises, et de l'intensification de la concurrence d'autres économies émergentes à plus faibles coûts de production, les entreprises doivent modifier leur comportement en Chine et se focaliser davantage sur les impératifs d'efficience et de viabilité.

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  • 11-May-2017

    English

    Enhancing financial stability amid slowing growth in China

    Growth in China has been slowing gradually, but GDP per capita remains on course to almost double between 2010 and 2020. As a result, the Chinese economy will remain the major driver of global growth for the foreseeable future.

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  • 10-April-2017

    English

    Making the most of innovation in China

    On several measures, China has caught up with OECD economies in the area of innovation.

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  • 31-March-2017

    English

    An immediate Chinese challenge: further addressing vast income inequality

    The goal of the Chinese government to achieve a “moderately prosperous society in all respects” by 2020 is centred around improving social welfare throughout the population. One of the essential ingredients to doing this is a further reduction in economic inequality.

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  • 6-December-2016

    English, PDF, 130kb

    PISA 2015 high performer: China

    With over 1.36 billion people, the People’s Republic of China is the world’s most populous country and has the world’s largest education system. China is a high performer in the 2015 OECD Programme for International Student Assessment.

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  • 24-November-2016

    English, PDF, 2,772kb

    Education in China - a snapshot

    In 2015, three economies in China participated in the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment, or PISA, for the first time: Beijing, a municipality, Jiangsu, a province on the eastern coast of the country, and Guangdong, a southern coastal province. Shanghai, which, like Beijing, is also a Chinese megacity of over 20 million people, has participated in PISA since 2009.

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  • 27-October-2016

    English

    Enabling China's Transition towards a Knowledge-based Economy

    Since the beginning of China’s economic transformation in the early 1970s, investment has been a key driver of China’s growth and has contributed to substantial improvements in living standards. Over three decades of average annual GDP growth of 10%, disposable incomes have soared, lifting hundreds of millions of people out of extreme poverty. The share of the population living in extreme poverty has declined from above 90% in the early 1980s to less than 10% today. However, this growth model is no longer sustainable. Returns on investment have declined, although they are still higher than those of the Asian Tigers. Excess capacity is plaguing several sectors, and negative externalities have been onerous, notably in terms of environmental degradation and income inequality. A key objective of the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-2020) is therefore to move the economy towards a path of more balanced, sustainable and inclusive growth.
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