Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The International Monetary Fund, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis [12] and other sources, such as the Article IV Consultation Reports, [13] [note 2] state that, at the end of 2014, the "general government gross debt"-to-GDP ratio for China was 41.54 percent. [14] With China's 2014 GDP being US$ 10,356.508 billion, [14] [15] this makes the ...
[1]: 81 A debt instrument is a financial claim that requires payment of interest and/or principal by the debtor to the creditor in the future. Examples include debt securities (such as bonds and bills), loans, and government employee pension obligations. [1]: 207 Net debt equals gross debt minus financial assets that are debt instruments.
At the end of the 1st quarter of 2021, the United States public debt-to-GDP ratio was 127.5%. [4] Two-thirds of US public debt is owned by US citizens, banks, corporations, and the Federal Reserve Bank; [5] approximately one-third of US public debt is held by foreign countries – particularly China and Japan.
China’s “debt-to-GDP ratio is a little bit on the high side for a single ‘A’ credit,” McCormack said. China currently has a debt-to-GDP ratio of 281.5%, ...
The two sources said China will maintain an unchanged GDP growth target of around 5% in 2025. ... raise the fiscal deficit ratio and issue more government debt next year, but did not mention ...
Fitch said its calculations showed that China's overall level of general government debt stood at 49.2 percent of GDP at the end of 2012, roughly in line with the A-grade median of 51.2 percent.
This is a list of countries by external debt: it is the total public and private debt owed to nonresidents repayable in internationally accepted currencies, goods or services, where the public debt is the money or credit owed by any level of government, from central to local, and the private debt the money or credit owed by private households or private corporations based on the country under ...
I will multiply emerging economies’ debt/GDP ratio by 2 and non-major Eurozone economies’ debt/GDP ratio by 1.5 for ranking purposes because these countries either borrow in foreign currencies ...