This book examines the international political economy of China's
exchange rate policy making from theoretical and empirical perspectives.
It identifies the limitations in the existing Economics studies on the
RMB exchange rate and the research gap of the Comparative Political
Economy (CPE) and International Political Economy (IPE) approaches to
exchange rate politics. The author develops a three-level game framework
for China's exchange rate policy making based on revision and synthesis
of the existing CPE and IPE approaches, which provides a richer portrait
of the dynamism and complexity of China's exchange rate policy making.
The book has applied the three-level game framework to empirically
analyzing China's exchange rate policy making under the Hu-Wen
administration. The book also discusses some further exploration of
China's exchange rate policy in the Xi era and comparative case study of
exchange rate policy making. It is a timely and rigorous study on the
role that international and domestic politics play in forging China's
exchange rate policy making in the twenty-first century.