Keyu Jin, LSE Associate Professor of Economics on China and the Evolution of the Financial System
At the 2019 Spring Meetings the IMF’s Christine Lagarde talks with young economists on the evolution of the financial system. What challenges lie ahead for the global economy, and the central role of the IMF in continuing to provide expertise to member states and as an avenue for further strengthening multilateral cooperation.
Watch the full seminar: https://meetings.imf.org/en/2019/Spring/Schedule/2019/04/10/imf-seminar-bretton-woods-at-75
Видео Keyu Jin, LSE Associate Professor of Economics on China and the Evolution of the Financial System канала IMF
Watch the full seminar: https://meetings.imf.org/en/2019/Spring/Schedule/2019/04/10/imf-seminar-bretton-woods-at-75
Видео Keyu Jin, LSE Associate Professor of Economics on China and the Evolution of the Financial System канала IMF
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
The Elephant In The Room: An Update On China (Keyu Lin, London School of Economics) | DLD 18Keyu Jin: What The World Can Learn From Chinese InnovationDr Keyu Jin, London School of Economics, Trade in a time of uncertaintyThe Remaking of Global FinanceChina: Friend or Foe?Meeting future leaders of China | Keyu Jin | TEDxChaoyangWomenLSE Events | Dharshini David | The Almighty DollarProfessor Jin Keyu brings Chinese voice to world economic discussionJack Ma: You're Supposed to Spend Money on Your PeopleFor the first time in decades China is importing more than it's exporting: London School of...Regional Economic Outlook for Asia-Pacific, April 2022Steve Bannon and Kyle Bass on China trade dealA World of UncertaintyUrban Age Developing Urban Futures: Ethiopia's urban transformation - Panel discussionHow to Measure a New Economy | DAVOS 2020Techno-nationalism and Technology Competition - Prof Keyu Jin, London School of EconomicsNavigating Complexity: Reforming China's Economic ReformsTHE PERSONAL STATEMENT THAT GOT ME INTO LSE, KCL, BRISTOL + | how to write the personal statement"Too much Maths, too little History: The problem of Economics"