Pitch Engine
The Property Pack

.

What we can expect from China's economy in 2018

  • Written by Alice de Jonge, Senior Lecturer, International Law; Asian Business Law, Monash University
What we can expect from China's economy in 2018This year the Chinese Communist Party will tackle some of it's biggest economic hurdles.AAP

In 2017, we saw the consolidation of China’s power and influence globally, and of Communist Party leader Xi Jinping’s power nationally. This year, the party will try to use this to tackle some of its biggest economic hurdles such as financial...

Read more: What we can expect from China's economy in 2018

More Articles ...

  1. Open plan offices CAN actually work, under certain conditions
  2. Business leaders aren't backing up their promises on sustainable development goals
  3. Bias creeps into reference checks, so is it time to ditch them?
  4. 13 'ye olde' phrases that would be far better in the workplace
  5. Keating's Working Nation plan for jobs was hijacked by bureaucracy: cabinet papers 1994-95
  6. What data tells us about the best cricket players
  7. How and why economics is taking over sports
  8. Bad data collection means we don't know how much the middle class is being squeezed by the wealthy
  9. CBA admissions will make class action easier but shareholders still have a lot to prove
  10. Vital Signs: Australia heads into 2018 with mixed economic signals
  11. Greater skills diversity on boards might actually be worse for business
  12. A bubble? We don't even know how to value Bitcoin
  13. Westfield's history tracks the rise of the Australian shopping centre and shows what's to come
  14. What is going rotten in the franchise businesses plagued by scandals
  15. Instead of rebuilding stadiums, the NSW government should focus on local sport and events
  16. Older people now less likely to fall into poverty
  17. It would cost you 20 cents more per T-shirt to pay an Indian worker a living wage
  18. What makes us sign up to subscription boxes
  19. Why coaching, not gadgets, is key to getting the most out of employees
  20. Young people still find it hard to get a job, despite using the same tactics as older job seekers
  21. How social enterprises are building a more inclusive Australian economy
  22. It's not just women at the top who are paid less than men
  23. Sydney the most expensive capital in Australia, Perth comes in fifth: new report
  24. Governments haven't always shirked responsibility for our low wages
  25. How 'brand you' came to be
  26. Three charts on: poorer Australians bearing the brunt of rising housing costs
  27. The economics of ridiculously expensive art
  28. Queensland election: One Nation dominates Twitter debate in the final weeks
  29. Vital Signs: five economic red flags to watch for in 2018
  30. Experiments in robotics could help Amazon beat Australia's slow delivery problem
  31. No, we aren't running out of new ideas
  32. Why good design alone won't attract millennials to your company
  33. Why the fashion industry keeps failing to fix labour exploitation
  34. It's too soon to celebrate a narrowing gender wage gap
  35. From Lord of the Rings to Crocodile Dundee – franchising Australian culture?
  36. How 'liar loans' undermine sound lending practices
  37. The blockchain does not eliminate the need for trust
  38. The public should be 'shocked, dismayed and disgusted' at the major banks
  39. Increasing wages would make the Australian economy safer
  40. Honey Birdette and the changing attitudes to sex in advertising
  41. Twitter analysis shows Queensland Labor has put Adani behind them
  42. What we can learn from the Warren Buffett of the web
  43. Could we nationalise the superannuation system even if we wanted to?
  44. How the Paradise Papers reveal the tension between rock stars and the tax man
  45. Three strategies to fight the tax avoidance revealed by the Paradise Papers
  46. With a new futures market, Bitcoin is going mainstream
  47. What the NRA can teach us about the art of public persuasion
  48. Vital Signs: the US economy is outpacing Australia's and we should all ask why
  49. The Murray Goulburn dilemma – co-operatives are dying out but they're still needed
  50. Why the RBA would want to create a digital Australian dollar