Academic literature on the topic 'Chinese American Bank of Commerce'

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Journal articles on the topic "Chinese American Bank of Commerce"

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Pugach, Noel H. "Second Career: James A. Thomas and the Chinese American Bank of Commerce." Pacific Historical Review 56, no. 2 (May 1, 1987): 195–229. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3639745.

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Linnan, David K., and Noel H. Pugach. "Same Bed, Different Dreams: A History of the Chinese American Bank of Commerce, 1919-1937." Journal of American History 86, no. 1 (June 1999): 258. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2567482.

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Wright, Tim. "Same Bed, Different Dreams: A History of the Chinese American Bank of Commerce, 1919–1937. By Noel H. Pugach. [Hong Kong: Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 1997. xi + 384 pp. HK $160.00. ISBN 962-8269-06-2.]." China Quarterly 161 (March 2000): 323–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741000004227.

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Agfiyani, Acik, and Serly Serly. "Pengaruh Perlambatan Ekonomi Global dan Kinerja Keuangan Bank terhadap Pengembalian Saham Bank-Bank Komersial di Bursa Efek Indonesia." Global Financial Accounting Journal 3, no. 1 (April 25, 2019): 42. http://dx.doi.org/10.37253/gfa.v3i1.436.

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This study aims to determine the effect of global economic slowdown and bank financial performance on the return of shares of commercial banks on the IDX. The independent variables used are NIM, NPL, CAR, LDR, Indonesian GDP, Chinese GDP, and American GDP. This study uses a sample of 31 commercial banks listed on the IDX in the period 2013-2017. The results of the study state that China's GDP and NPL have a positive effect on stock returns. The independent variable of American GDP has a negative effect on stock returns. Whereas NIM, CAR, LDR, and Indonesian GDP are declared not to affect stock returns.
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HEALEY, Deborah J., and Zhang CHENYING. "Bank Mergers in China: What Role for Competition?" Asian Journal of Comparative Law 12, no. 1 (April 10, 2017): 81–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/asjcl.2017.2.

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AbstractThis article examines the likely role of competition in the regulatory analysis of bank mergers in China. Despite financial reforms, the banking sector remains subject to a complex web of financial regulation, with industrial policy favouring stability to facilitate national economic development. While there are currently no Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) bank merger determinations under the Anti-Monopoly Law (AML), examples of MOFCOM’s merger analysis in other sensitive industries diverge from a pure competition-based analysis, favouring grounds linked to national economic development broadly within the terms of the AML. Given the importance of banking to the Chinese economy, this article argues that competition is unlikely to play a large part in any assessment of bank mergers by MOFCOM, particularly where a foreign bank is involved. Instead, issues linked to ‘national economic development’ and stability are likely to play the most important role, leading to less predictable merger approval outcomes.
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Dai, Kaichuang. "Risk of credit assessment of Chinese bank of commerce based on KMW model and its empirical research." IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering 768 (March 31, 2020): 052122. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1757-899x/768/5/052122.

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Zhu, Shi-Zhao, Xin-Li Li, Sen Nie, Wen-Qing Zhang, Gao-Feng Yu, Xiao-Pu Han, and Bing-Hong Wang. "Cross-correlation matrix analysis of Chinese and American bank stocks in subprime crisis." Chinese Physics B 24, no. 5 (April 30, 2015): 058903. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1674-1056/24/5/058903.

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Ling, Huping. "Chinese Chicago: Transnational Migration and Businesses, 1870s‐1930s." Journal of Chinese Overseas 6, no. 2 (2010): 250–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/179325410x526122.

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AbstractEmploying the theoretical framework of transnationalism, this study closely examines how the transnational kinship networks played out in various aspects of the Chinese businesses in Chicago, through reconstructing the transnational Chinese businesses during the period from the 1870s to the1930s. Utilizing primary sources in both English and Chinese, in particular the Immigration and Naturalization Services (INS) Chicago Chinese Case Files (CCCF) and Chinese gazetteers, it also demonstrates how the Chinese community in Chicago served as a vital link of the transnational migration and business networks and a center of commerce and trade in the American Midwest during this period.
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Lin-chun, Wu. "China and the United States: Business, Technology, and Networks, 1914–1941." Journal of American-East Asian Relations 27, no. 2 (July 15, 2020): 119–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18765610-02702002.

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This paper studies the activities of American enterprises, technology, and related business organizations and engineering groups in China from the outbreak of World War i to the Pacific War and explains how these activities helped establish connections between China and the world. It borrows the concept of “networks” from Professor Sherman Cochran’s extraordinary book titled Encountering Chinese Networks, but broadens the scope of the term to include activity at the level of management and competition, as well as placing Sino-American relations in transnational perspective. Using a multi-archival approach to examine China’s major attempts at internationalization, this article focuses on the cases of the American Asiatic Association, the American Chamber of Commerce of China, and the Association of Chinese and American Engineers to show how these networks played important roles in the development of Chinese-American relations. It also discusses the issues of standardization, “scientific management,” and professionalism of entrepreneurs and engineers in influencing network making.
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Huang, Jie. "Comparison of E-commerce Regulations in Chinese and American FTAs: Converging Approaches, Diverging Contents, and Polycentric Directions?" Netherlands International Law Review 64, no. 2 (July 2017): 309–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40802-017-0094-1.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Chinese American Bank of Commerce"

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Wang, Dan. "Three essays on bank technology, cost structure, and performance." Diss., Online access via UMI:, 2007.

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Wang, Jiayi. "Relational management in professional intercultural interaction : Chinese officials' encounters with American and British professionals." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2013. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/59959/.

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Professional intercultural communication is of growing importance in today’s globalising world. This study analyses the dynamics of relating that occurred between Chinese officials and American officials and other professionals during a three-week delegation visit to the USA. Drawing on concepts and frameworks in pragmatics, sociolinguistics, cross-cultural psychology, communication studies and translation studies, it takes a data-driven approach to explore Chinese officials’ professional interaction with American/British professionals. This kind of interaction, which involved government officials, has rarely been studied before. During the delegation visit, over twenty authentic professional intercultural events including formal meetings and banquets were recorded in six major cities in the USA. Relational issues and the interactants’ interpretations of these issues from both sides were extracted and examined from twenty-hour-long video recordings and two-hour-long audio recordings of official interaction, fifteen-thousand-word notes of the delegation’s evening meetings where they reflected on the day’s events, forty-one individual post-event and post-trip interviews with the Chinese and fourteen open-ended questionnaire responses from the Americans. Taking a first order approach, I place the interactants’ perspectives at the core and significantly reduce my interference by starting from the natural and spontaneous reflections made by the participants in the evening meetings. I then check the generality of the findings by comparing them with a second dataset which comprises eighty-six narrative accounts of Chinese-non-Chinese professional communication reported by thirty-seven Chinese officials and three businesspeople. My analysis takes a developmental perspective, and reveals the complexities of relational management as it unfolds over time. A number of different norms and interactional principles emerge, and my investigation of relational management combines motivational (e.g., Rapport Management theory) and descriptive aspects (e.g., dialectical theory). The study contributes to our understanding of the conceptualization and operationalization of the key concepts face, politeness and relations as well as the major practical concerns of gifts, hosting and interactional styles, including language and interpreting. For example, the findings suggest that while the concepts face, politeness, guanxi and the “relational”, i.e., relations/relationships/relating, tend to be conflated and remain largely entangled in the literature, all of them are distinguishable. First, face and politeness are conceptually distinct, and their connection is not as strong as we have assumed. Second, while both face and guanxi can be viewed as enduring yet not static entities, they are two separate concepts. Guanxi work is much broader than facework and face is only one of the major motivations behind it. Yet guanxi dynamics frequently have face implications. Face can be gained when guanxi goes well and is very likely to be lost when it goes wrong. Additionally, face and the “relational” are not synonymous. In spite of the emerging call for a relational study of face, it is not a property of a relationship and merely analysing it in talk-in-interaction is inadequate.
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"A study on the perception of Chinese and American on US-China business negotiation in the electronic industry." Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1994. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5888037.

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by Ho Hin-shun.
Includes questionnaire in Chinese.
Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1994.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 81-84).
ABSTRACT --- p.iii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS --- p.v
TABLE OF CONTENTS --- p.vi
LIST OF TABLES --- p.viii
Chapter
Chapter 1. --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1
Chapter 2 . --- THE MANAGEMENT PROBLEM --- p.7
Chapter 3. --- LITERATURE REVIEW --- p.13
Chapter 4. --- RESEARCH OBJECTIVES --- p.19
Chapter 5. --- SAMPLE DATA AND METHODOLOGY --- p.22
Chapter 5.1. --- Sample Data --- p.22
Chapter 5.2. --- Questionnaire Construction --- p.23
Chapter 5.3. --- Administering the Questionnaire --- p.25
Chapter 6. --- RESULTS AND ANALYSIS --- p.27
Chapter 6.1. --- Sample Characteristics --- p.27
Chapter 6.2. --- Results of Questionnaire --- p.29
Chapter 6.3. --- Results of MANVOA --- p.29
Chapter 6. 4 --- .Multiple Regression --- p.39
Chapter 7. --- MANAGEMENT IMPLICATIONS --- p.52
Chapter 7.1. --- Satisfaction on US-China business negotiation --- p.53
Chapter 7.1.1 . --- American Point of View --- p.53
Chapter 7.1.2 . --- Chinese Point of View --- p.54
Chapter 7.2. --- Efficiency on US-China business negotiation --- p.54
Chapter 7.2.1 . --- American Point of View --- p.54
Chapter 7.2.2. --- Chinese point of view --- p.55
Chapter 7.3. --- Future in US-China Business --- p.56
Chapter 7.3.1 . --- American Point of View --- p.56
Chapter 7.3.2. --- Chinese Point of View --- p.57
Chapter 7.4. --- Short term expectation in trade and investment --- p.57
Chapter 7.4.1 . --- American Point of View --- p.57
Chapter 7.4.2. --- Chinese Point of View --- p.58
Chapter 7.5. --- Long term expectation in trade and investment --- p.58
Chapter 7.5.1. --- American Point of View --- p.58
Chapter 7.5.2. --- Chinese Point of View --- p.59
Chapter 7.6. --- Strategic Implications --- p.59
Chapter 7.6.1. --- Suggestions to American --- p.60
Chapter 7.6.2. --- Suggestions to Chinese --- p.62
Chapter 7.6.3. --- Research Implications --- p.63
Chapter 8. --- CONCLUSIONS --- p.64
APPENDIX 1 --- p.73
QUESTIONNAIRE IN ENGLISH ( THREE PAGES ) --- p.73
APPENDIX 2 --- p.77
QUESTIONNAIRE IN CHINESE ( THREE PAGES ) --- p.77
BIBLIOGRAPHY --- p.81
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4

Kelly-Louw, Michelle. "Selective legal aspects of bank demand guarantees." Thesis, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1350.

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Bank demand guarantees have become an established part of international trade. Demand guarantees, standby letters of credit and commercial letters of credit are all treated as autonomous contracts whose operation will not be interfered with by courts on grounds immaterial to the guarantee or credit itself. The idea in the documentary credit transaction/demand guarantee transaction is that if the documents (where applicable) presented are in line with the terms of the credit/guarantee the bank has to pay, and if the documents do not correspond to the requirements, the bank must not pay. However, over the years a limited number of exceptions to the autonomy principle of demand guarantees and letters of credit have come to be acknowledged and accepted in practice. In certain circumstances, the autonomy of demand guarantees and letters of credit may be ignored by the bank and regard may be had to the terms and conditions of the underlying contract. The main exceptions concern fraud and illegality in the underlying contract. In this thesis a great deal of consideration has been given to fraud and illegality as possible grounds on which payment under demand guarantees and letters of credit have been attacked (and sometimes even prevented) in the English, American and South African courts. It will be shown that the prospect of success depends on the law applicable to the demand guarantee and letter of credit, and the approach a court in a specific jurisdiction takes. At present, South Africa has limited literature on demand guarantees, and the case law regarding the grounds upon which payment under a demand guarantee might be prevented is scarce and often non-existent. In South Africa one finds guidance by looking at similar South African case law dealing with commercial and standby letters of credit and applying these similar principles to demand guarantees. The courts, furthermore, find guidance by looking at how other jurisdictions, in particular the English courts, deal with these issues. Therefore, how the South African courts currently deal/should be dealing/probably will be dealing with the unfair and fraudulent calling of demand guarantees/letters of credit is discussed in this thesis.
Jurisprudence
LL.D
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Books on the topic "Chinese American Bank of Commerce"

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Pugach, Noel H. Same bed, different dreams: A history of the Chinese American Bank of Commerce, 1919-1937. [Hong Kong]: Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 1997.

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Mei shi Ying yu zi ku: American style word bank. Taibei Shi: Su huo chu ban you xian gong si, 2005.

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Milligan-Whyte, John. New China business strategies: Chinese and American companies as global partners. New York: SPI Books, 2009.

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Mayer, Robert Stanley. The influence of Frank A. Vanderlip and the National City Bank on American commerce and foreign policy, 1910-1920. New York: Garland Pub., 1987.

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Cowboys and dragons: Shattering cultural myths to advance Chinese-American business. Chicago: Dearborn Trade Pub., 2003.

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E, Dixon John. Entering the Chinese market: The risks and discounted rewards. Westport, Conn: Quorum, 1998.

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Office, General Accounting. Foreign bank: Initial assessment of certain BCCI activities in the U.S. Washington, D.C: GAO, 1992.

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Conquering the American market: ABN AMRO, Rabobank and Nationale-Nederlanden working in a different business environment, 1965-2005. Amsterdam: Boom, 2008.

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US GOVERNMENT. Compilation of the Older Americans Act of 1965 and the Native American Programs Act of 1974: As amended through December 31, 1994. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1995.

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US GOVERNMENT. Compilation of the Older Americans Act of 1965 and the Native American Programs Act of 1974: As amended through December 31, 1992. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Chinese American Bank of Commerce"

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Friedman, Walter A. "2. Commerce in the new nation, 1780–1820." In American Business History: A Very Short Introduction, 15–27. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780190622473.003.0003.

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During a period of dramatic population growth and geographical expansion, farming and agriculture were central to the American economy. “Commerce in the new nation, 1780–1820” looks at the growth of new industries. The new American economy stumbled into a recession nearly as severe as the Great Depression of the 1930s. Alexander Hamilton, first secretary of the Treasury, made significant contributions to stabilizing the economy, advocating for the buying of war debts and the foundation of a central bank. New roads, canals, and the invention of the steamboat aided the distribution of goods within America. General merchants found themselves in competition with specialized dealers.
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Davis, Nancy E. "Introduction." In The Chinese Lady, 1–8. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190645236.003.0001.

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The introduction provides the early history of the American China trade by recounting China trader Captain John O’Donnell’s landing with Chinese seamen in Baltimore in 1785 and a newspaper welcome that asserted: “Commerce binds and unites all Nations of the Globe with a golden chain.” Nearly a half-century later, in 1834, a young Chinese woman, Afong Moy, arrived in America, having been coerced to participate in this golden chain of global commerce. As the first Chinese woman to travel the country, her exotic appearance and bound feet elicited commentary in newspapers, diaries, poems, and letters. Unwittingly, she served as the first cultural bridge in the American public’s perceptions of China through the staged presentation of objects, clothing, and images—and herself.
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Fraser, Simon. "Caribbean Companies and the Information Superhighway." In Encyclopedia of Developing Regional Communities with Information and Communication Technology, 79–84. IGI Global, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-575-7.ch013.

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With the explosion of public awareness of the Internet in the early 1990s, much attention has been focused on ways in which these new technologies can be used in developing nations. Some of the primary proponents of these initiatives include the World Bank, The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and the Inter American Development Bank. The major themes include ways in which the Internet and electronic commerce can be harnessed for development, impediments to rapid diffusion of Internet technologies and success stories in small and medium companies.
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Fraser, Simon. "Caribbean Companies and the Information Superhighway." In Global Information Technologies, 2992–3003. IGI Global, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59904-939-7.ch212.

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With the explosion of public awareness of the Internet in the early 1990s, much attention has been focused on ways in which these new technologies can be used in developing nations. Some of the primary proponents of these initiatives include the World Bank, The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and the Inter American Development Bank. The major themes include ways in which the Internet and electronic commerce can be harnessed for development, impediments to rapid diffusion of Internet technologies and success stories in small and medium companies.
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Fraser, Simon. "Caribbean Companies and the Information Superhighway." In Information Communication Technologies, 1986–94. IGI Global, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59904-949-6.ch142.

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With the explosion of public awareness of the Internet in the early 1990s, much attention has been focused on ways in which these new technologies can be used in developing nations. Some of the primary proponents of these initiatives include the World Bank, The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and the Inter American Development Bank. The major themes include ways in which the Internet and electronic commerce can be harnessed for development, impediments to rapid diffusion of Internet technologies and success stories in small and medium companies.
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Bollard, Alan. "Richest Man in the World?" In Economists at War, 31–62. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198846000.003.0002.

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The assassination sent shockwaves through China, and soon led to the 1937 invasion by Japan. H. H. Kung was an American-educated Minister of Finance in the turbulent China of the 1930s. He was a member of the famous Soong family—both Sun Yat-sen and Chiang Kai-shek were brothers-in-law, and his wife was the richest woman in China. As the Japanese invaded, the economy in China progressively worsened. With little regard for the law, Kung proved adept at raising revenue by forcing Chinese to pay taxes, by bank fraud, by manipulating the currency, always with something on the side for him and his family. As the war worsened, he extracted aid dollars from the American taxpayer. When the Communists took power Kung reinvented himself as a wealthy Wall Street banker.
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Green, Jeremy. "From Crisis to Stagnation." In The Political Economy of the Special Relationship, 251–70. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691197326.003.0009.

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This chapter describes some of the major themes of the postcrisis political economy of Anglo-America. Identifying the central policy pairing between fiscal austerity and monetary loosening, it draws upon accounts of the structural crisis of neoliberal capitalism, arguing that, despite the adoption of unorthodox monetary policy and the restoration of growth, economic recovery has failed to arrest the underlying structural crisis of Anglo-American political economies. In the postcrisis era, the reliance upon a strategy of ultralow interest rates and quantitative easing initiated by the US and the UK demonstrated the continued centrality of Anglo-American central bank leadership to the global economy. But the sluggish return to growth in the West, and the continued stagnation of living standards within the UK and the US specifically, have revealed the declining ability of neoliberal capitalism to deliver economic growth and distributional gains in amounts adequate to bolster democratic consent. The rise of antiestablishment politics in both states—and the fracturing of the longstanding eoliberal center ground of party politics—has led to new political and economic dynamics. Alongside these changes, the rebalancing of the City–Bank–Treasury nexus toward Chinese finance, the policies of Donald Trump, and Brexit are transforming the global economy.
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Conference papers on the topic "Chinese American Bank of Commerce"

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ChengWei Zhang. "Analysis of development process, problems and strategies in Chinese bank insurance." In 2011 2nd International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Management Science and Electronic Commerce (AIMSEC). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aimsec.2011.6010517.

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"Comparative Study of Differences between Chinese and American E-commerce Enterprises." In 2018 International Conference on Economics, Finance, Business, and Development. Francis Academic Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.25236/icefbd.18.033.

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Eaton, Matthew A. "Analysis of Boiler Fouling and Boiler Cleaning Methods at the Commerce Refuse-to-Energy Facility." In 15th Annual North American Waste-to-Energy Conference. ASMEDC, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/nawtec15-3210.

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Waste-to-energy boiler fire-side fouling is a major operational issue for many facilities, including the Commerce Refuse-to-Energy Facility. The Commerce Refuse-to-Energy Facility is a 350 ton per day, mass burn waterwall facility that began operation in 1987. Fouling occurs throughout the convection sections with the highest differential pressure occurring across the generating bank. Flue gas differential pressures and temperatures have been tracked and analyzed at the facility for approximately ten years during various operating conditions. It has been determined that the rate of increase of the differential pressure across the generating bank is correlated with flue gas temperature and the extent of fouling. Several different cleaning methods have been used to clear the convection zone of ash deposits, including off-line hydroblasting, on-line hydroblasting, on-line explosives cleaning, sootblowers and sonic horns. Better understanding of the fouling trends and evaluation of cleaning methods has led the facility to use a combination of on-line hydroblasting and explosives cleaning and off-line hydroblasting. The facility is now able to operate one year between planned outages, compared to ten weeks during the initial operation of the facility. Additional savings have also been achieved by reducing induced draft fan load, and possibly a reduction in tube wastage.
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