Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Hong Kong Baptist University Home
Help & FAQ
Home
Scholars
Departments / Units
Research Output
Projects / Grants
Prizes / Awards
Activities
Press/Media
Student theses
Datasets
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Bei QIN public CV
View Scopus Profile
Bei QIN, Prof
Associate Professor
,
Department of Accountancy, Economics and Finance
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9069-0716
Email
beiqin
hkbu.edu
hk
2010
2024
Research activity per year
Overview
Fingerprint
Network
Projects / Grants
(1)
Research Output
(5)
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics where Bei QIN is active. Topic labels come from the works of this scholar. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by:
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Propaganda
66%
China
66%
Development Economics
33%
Political Economy
33%
Rural China
33%
Media Bias
33%
Media Economics
33%
Medical Expenditure
33%
Political Development
33%
Social Media
33%
Healthcare Demand
33%
Chinese Economy
33%
Commercial Content
22%
Income Effect
22%
Corruption
16%
Health Status
11%
Negative Relationships
11%
Medical Services
11%
Credit Constraints
11%
Education Expenditure
11%
Public Health Insurance
11%
Political Goals
11%
Poor People
11%
Healthcare Consumption
11%
Rural Residents
11%
Residents' Demand
11%
Market Competition
11%
Nutrition Surveys
11%
Economic Trade-offs
11%
Low-income
11%
Education Status
11%
Reduced Competition
11%
Health Surveys
11%
Medical Care
11%
Political Bias
11%
Health Care Reform
11%
Government Owned
11%
Product Proliferation
11%
Product Specialization
11%
China Health
11%
Health Inequalities
11%
Mouthpiece
11%
Protest Waves
11%
Authoritarian Regimes
8%
Microblogging Services
8%
Public Debate
8%
Chinese Social Media
8%
Controversial Political Issues
8%
Highly Sensitive
8%
Specific Events
8%
Social Sciences
China
100%
Chinese
50%
Collective Action
33%
Media Communication
33%
Political Goal
16%
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Income Effect
33%
Wealth
33%
Media Bias
33%
Corruption
33%
Economic development
33%
Health Care Reform
16%
Public Health Insurance
16%
Credit Rationing
16%
Price
16%