Yukon Huang

Senior Associate
Asia Program
Huang is a senior associate in the Carnegie Asia Program, where his research focuses on China’s economic development and its impact on Asia and the global economy.
 

Education

PhD, MA, Princeton University 
BA, Yale University

Languages

Chinese; English

Contact Information

 

Yukon Huang is a senior associate in the Carnegie Asia Program, where his research focuses on China’s economic development and its impact on Asia and the global economy.

Previously, he was the World Bank’s country director for China (1997–2004) and for Russia and the former Soviet Union Republics of Central Asia (1992–1997). Before that, he served as lead economist for Asia and chief for Country Assistance Strategies. He has also held positions at the U.S. Treasury and various universities in the United States, Tanzania, and Malaysia.

He is the A-List commentator for the Financial Times on China, and his articles also appear frequently in other major media such as the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Foreign Affairs, and CNN. 

Huang has published widely on development issues, recently co-editing the book East Asia Visions, a collection of papers by noted Asian scholars on future prospects for the region. He recently completed a volume entitled Reshaping Economic Geography in East Asia.

He is an adviser to the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, as well as to various governments and companies. 

  • Op-Ed Financial Times May 16, 2013
    Coming to Terms with China's Growth Prospects

    Beijing faces a trade-off between stimulating short-term economic growth and acting on the structural reforms needed to establish a basis for sustainable growth in the future.

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  • Op-Ed Wall Street Journal May 14, 2013
    The World Needs a More Active China

    Relations in Asia have deteriorated in large part because China’s willingness to act lags behind its capabilities. More productive outcomes could be realized if China became more active in crafting the global agenda.

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  • Op-Ed Financial Times March 26, 2013
    China’s Road to Becoming a “Responsible” World Power

    Western powers can encourage China to become a responsible stakeholder by reassuring Beijing that its concerns will be heard and its interests can be served through compromise.

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  • Op-Ed Financial Times March 12, 2013
    Urbanisation Is Only a Partial Panacea for China

    Urbanization holds the key to a more innovation-driven growth model and sustained consumption demand in China, but the process also presents several challenges.

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  • Op-Ed Bloomberg March 6, 2013
    Where Have China's Workers Gone?

    Policy distortions, shifting labor migration patterns, and higher education enrollments are creating labor shortages and skill-mix problems in China.

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  • Article March 5, 2013
    China, the Abnormal Great Power

    China is criticized for becoming more assertive, aggressive, and bullying, but in reality it should be seen as too reactive.

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  • Op-Ed Global Times March 3, 2013
    Xi Has Unique Chance to Offer Truly Transformative Leadership

    Some observers see Xi's varied contacts with the West and his experience being the son of one of the prominent figures of the revolutionary era as providing clues that he will be more forceful in steering the collective leadership.

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  • Op-Ed Wall Street Journal February 21, 2013
    Fixing China’s Harmful Inequality

    Beijing needs to reform its labor migration policies and use the profits from state enterprises to fund social services.

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  • Op-Ed Financial Times January 29, 2013 中文
    China’s Banks Have Become “Too Big to Manage”

    Rather than being an economic vulnerability, China's banks are too secure. The challenge is to introduce more competition and improve governance of the banking system.

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  • Op-Ed International Herald Tribune January 29, 2013
    In China, Most Politics Is Local

    Given the collective nature of China’s decision-making, more attention needs to be given to whether China’s unique form of regional decentralization can continue unchanged.

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  • CNBC's Squawk Box November 13, 2012
    The Role of SOEs in China's Future

    Vested interests have capped the growth of the private sector in China. The Chinese government needs to promote greater competition between the state-owned enterprise sector and the private sector.

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  • BBC World News November 8, 2012
    Corruption and Reform in China

    Pervasive corruption is causing increasing unrest in China, and while political transition has sparked hopes for reforms, vested interests pose a daunting challenging.

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  • BBC News April 30, 2012
    Chen Guangcheng: Both Countries Want 'Quick Resolution'

    Both the United States and China want to resolve the tension caused by the escape of Chen Guangcheng before high-level U.S. officials are scheduled to arrive in Beijing.

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  • BBC News March 13, 2012
    Row Over Rare Earth Metals

    Rare earth metals are vital ingredients in a wide range of high tech product lines important to global trade and China's perceived monopoly on these metals is a big concern for the West.

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  • CSPAN's Washington Journal August 19, 2011
    China's Economic Growth: Challenges and Opportunities for the United States

    The United States must generate more high-value jobs to capitalize on the opportunities presented by a rising China, which is likely to continue to make sustaining double-digit growth a key priority.

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  • Yukon Huang
    PBS NewsHour January 20, 2011
    As China's Economy Grows, How Hard Should U.S. Push on Currency, Human Rights?

    While China's trade imbalance and currency valuation are in a process of gradual rebalancing, the central question now facing China's economy is how to begin producing higher technology exports.

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  • The financial sector in Shanghai
    China Brief Insight December 7, 2010
    China's Economic Direction

    While Beijing’s economic growth strategy has led to a significant competitive advantage for China, it has also increased inequality between urban and rural areas and put China’s economy at risk of overheating.

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  • Yukon Huang
    Bloomberg News November 3, 2010
    China's Yuan Policy

    If China is forced to substantially revalue its currency, it is likely to enact policies for maintaining its export competitiveness that could hurt Western economies.

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  • November 30, 2012 Washington, D.C. 中文
    Russia and China in the Global Economy

    Russia and China are facing new challenges as they engage the new globalized marketplace. What can they learn from each other as they try to increase human capital and develop knowledge-based economies?

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  • September 27, 2012 Washington, D.C. 中文
    China’s Economic Slowdown and its Policy Implications

    There is increasing concern that China’s economic slowdown is intensifying. However it turns out, this slowdown is occurring at a particularly inopportune time for China—just as the next generation of leaders is being anointed.

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  • March 21, 2012 Washington, D.C.
    Assessing the National People's Congress

    The Fifth Session of the Eleventh National People’s Congress (NPC) has added significance given the impending anointment of China's next generation of senior leaders at this fall's National Congress of the Communist Party.

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  • February 13, 2012 Beijing 中文
    The China Conundrum

    No country generates as many different economic forecasts and interpretations than China. Some analysts claim that China is an unstoppable economic power, while others warn that China’s economic growth is unstable, unbalanced, and unsustainable.

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  • December 21, 2011 Washington, D.C. 中文
    Global Economic Outlook: China, the Euro Crisis, and the United States

    The global economic outlook for 2012 and 2013 is exceptionally uncertain. With the euro crisis continuing to fester, a global credit crunch, and generalized slowdown threatening emerging markets, it remains unclear where growth will come from.

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  • October 13, 2011 Beijing 中文
    Future of China’s Economic Rise is Unpredictable

    China’s economy— more importantly, its domestic consumption— is not as unbalanced as it first appears and is a result of the broader direction of the country’s economy.

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  • Engineering China’s Financial Reform
    September 16, 2011 Washington, D.C. 中文
    Engineering China’s Financial Reform

    While China remains an engine of growth in an unsettled global economy, it also faces many challenges, including high inflation, the potential of a housing market bubble, and volatile global liquidity conditions.

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  • March 15, 2011 Beijing
    U.S.-China Relations Prior to the Strategic & Economic Dialogue Meeting in May 2011

    The Strategic and Economic Dialogue should be used by both China and the United States as a medium to facilitate energy and economic cooperation, overcome mounting mistrust that exists in both countries at public and government levels.

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  • February 16, 2011 Washington, D.C.
    Overheating in Emerging Markets: The Next Crisis?

    If asset prices and currency values overshoot and inflation surges, there is a risk that emerging markets will be hit with another potentially devastating financial crisis.

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  • January 13, 2011 Washington, D.C.
    U.S.-China Relations at a Crossroads: Briefing on Hu Jintao's State Visit

    For President Hu Jintao's state visit, a host of economic, political, and security issues top the agenda, including China's growth strategy, accusations of currency manipulation, territorial water rights, and North Korea.

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Source: http://carnegieendowment.org/experts/index.cfm?fa=expert_view&expert_id=533

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