主题:【原创】四面楚歌之美国篇 美国金融之庞氏局 -- 井底望天
也许神仙驴和老广也会有独到的见解,这里先一并谢过了。
Wire: BLOOMBERG News (BN) Date: Sep 24 2009 12:01:21
Liu He as China’s Larry Summers Makes Politburo Appreciate U.S.
By Bloomberg News
Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Two days after the collapse of
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. a year ago, an adviser sent by
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao met with a group of Harvard
University scholars to help shape his country’s response.
On March 30, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and
National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers separately
made time for the same man, Liu He, on the day the Obama
administration forced the ouster of General Motors Corp. Chief
Executive Officer Rick Wagoner.
Top-level access in Washington and Beijing gives Liu, a 57-
year-old graduate of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, a
pivotal role in the U.S.-China economic relationship. His
mission was to convey American sensibilities on the depth of the
U.S. financial crisis to Wen, said Anthony Saich, a professor at
the Kennedy School who attended the Sept. 17, 2008, meeting in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was part of a fact-finding tour
that included stops in New York, Washington and San Francisco.
“He’s a very sophisticated thinker, very analytical,”
said Saich, who said the meeting also included Harvard
economists such as Jeffrey Liebman, now a White House budget
official. “He’s a key person in preparing reports that are not
only going to the premier but also to the general secretary of
the party,” President Hu Jintao.
When Liu returned to Beijing from the September trip, his
report was made available to senior leaders, according to a
person familiar with the situation whose job prevents him from
speaking about Chinese officials publicly.
While it isn’t known what Liu reported, a Chinese response
to the crisis wasn’t long in coming. On Nov. 9, China announced
a 4 trillion-yuan ($586 billion) stimulus, which helped the
economy ride out the worst of the financial turmoil.
‘China’s Larry Summers’
“Liu He is one of only a few Chinese officials who can
speak the language of international finance,” said Cheng Li, a
senior fellow at Washington’s Brookings Institution who met Liu
in March. “He’s China’s Larry Summers.”
Unlike Summers, a frequent guest on U.S. television talk
shows, Liu avoids publicity, operating within a secretive
decision-making apparatus inside the burnt-red walls of
Beijing’s Zhongnanhai leadership compound. At least 10 people
who know him say he is quiet and modest. He turned down four
interview requests for this story.
Liu’s title since 2003 has been deputy director of the
office of the Central Leading Group on Financial and Economic
Affairs. Participants include Wen, Vice Premier Wang Qishan and
People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan, according to
China experts and non-governmental Web sites.
Pensions and Currency
To generate ideas for the leading group, Liu convenes
meetings of economists, bankers and government officials to hash
out options on everything from pensions to the value of the
yuan, according to a Chinese economist who has participated.
The economist, who asked not to be named because of the
sessions’ sensitive nature, described them as freewheeling and
devoid of ideology.
“They will pick some hotel in a suburb of Beijing, all
these people would show up, and Liu will say ‘We’re interested
in exchange-rate policies, talk,’” said Victor Shih, a
professor at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, and
author of the 2008 book “Factions and Finance in China.”
The leading group makes recommendations to the country’s
cabinet, the full 25-person Politburo or its elite nine-member
standing committee, led by Hu, 66, on whether to pull the
trigger on government policies, the Chinese economist said.
Top Members
Liu, who holds the rank of vice minister, also gathers
ideas from the Chinese Economists 50 Forum, a non-governmental
group he founded in 1998 that parlays academic research into
policy solutions. Members include Zhou and Lou Jiwei, the
chairman of China’s $297.5 billion sovereign wealth fund.
Liu spent much of his career in the State Planning
Commission, the agency that formerly set prices for everything
from bicycles to grain, according to his online biography. It
now writes industrial policy under a new name, the National
Development and Reform Commission.
A former soldier and factory worker who was sent to
Manchuria in the midst of China’s 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution,
Liu helped draft the five-year plans that underpinned China’s
economy. He has been a Communist Party member for more than
three decades, the biography says.
In a chapter from a 2008 book Liu wrote assessing China’s
30 years of economic openness, he praised the “grey area” the
country has found, moving toward a market economy without
“blindly” mimicking Western models.
No Extremes
“Liu’s economic philosophy is pragmatism,” the Brookings
Institution’s Li said. “He will not be obsessed with two
extremes. One is market fundamentalism and the other is the
previous planned economy, which completely failed.”
He has that in common with Summers’s great rival, Joseph
Stiglitz, a Nobel-prize winning economist at New York’s Columbia
University who served as chairman of the Council of Economic
Advisers under President Bill Clinton.
Stiglitz, 66, has praised China for its crisis response,
which focuses on government-funded investment in roads, bridges
and factories. At a May 13 forum in Beijing, Stiglitz said China
“has taken very rapid action to address the crisis” and may
emerge as “a winner.”
After the Cultural Revolution delayed Liu’s education, he
entered Beijing’s People’s University in 1978, earning a
master’s degree in economics, his biography said.
Liu studied management at Seton Hall University in South
Orange, New Jersey, in 1992-1993 and spent the next two years at
Harvard, earning a master’s degree in public administration in
1995, according to school records.
“One got the sense of an individual whose entire resume
had prepared him for his difficult tasks,” said Dennis Wilder,
who until January was Asia director at the White House National
Security Council and met Liu in March. Wilder now is a visiting
fellow at the Brookings Institution.
“He would be an extremely strong player in the game of
bilateral poker: well grounded in the technical issues, non-
polemic, and with an in-depth understanding of the United
States,” Wilder said.
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🙂对!要站在普通中国人的立场! none空空 字24 2009-09-24 11:45:41
🙂宝推 加东 字131 2009-09-24 10:48:24
🙂【原创】四面楚歌之美国篇 美国金融庞氏局之九 80 井底望天 字3681 2009-09-23 09:05:44
🙂井兄对彭博社这篇报道提到的人和事怎么看?
🙂中文名? 2 井底望天 字79 2009-09-24 10:38:16
🙂中国人终于开始用美国的操作手法和美国面对面干上了 赫然 字30 2009-09-24 18:38:32
🙂读了两遍。感慨很深。 2 厚积薄发 字851 2009-09-24 15:15:27
🙂精英都是捞过国界的 2 Levelworm 字196 2009-09-25 13:56:36