The different approach taken by China and the West towards finance and
the real economy rests upon philosophical foundations that have diverged
fundamentally since the Ancient World. Since the Asian Financial Crisis
in 1997-98 a tremendous transformation has taken place in the financial
systems in both China and the West. China has persisted steadily with
reform of its financial system but it remains heavily protected from
international competition. In the West regulatory structures have been
progressively dismantled, permitting an unprecedented secular expansion
of asset prices and debt relative to GDP. The structure crashed to the
ground with the collapse of asset prices in 2008-09. In the decade since
the GFC asset prices and debt in the West have rebounded. The West's
financial system stands on a knife- edge. In 2018 China announced the
intention to accelerate the opening up of the country's capital markets.
The way in which the Chinese and the West's financial system interact
constitutes a central issue in global political economy in the years
ahead.