China wields economic club

12 Oct 2012  2069 | World Travel News

SINGAPORE — The bitter dispute between China and Japan over their rival claims to ownership of the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea has severely strained bilateral political relations. Mishandling or mistakes by either side could trigger a clash between their paramilitary ships, drawing in regular forces and leading to a wider war. As if the prospect of a regional conflict between the world's second and third largest economies is not bad enough, China is extending the dispute into treacherous economic waters as well, potentially threatening Asia's growth and integration as well as stability. A recent report prepared for the U.S. Pacific Command (PACOM) in Hawaii, which oversees American forces and bases in the Asia-Pacific region, has called the Chinese strategy "guerrilla economic warfare." U.S. officials have not gone that far. However, they have expressed concern about China's use of "economic coercion" in its territorial disputes with Japan and, earlier this year, with the Philippines over their conflicting claims to Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea. Since the Japanese government tightened its hold last month on the uninhabited Senkaku Islands, which it has administered since the 1970s, China has applied or encouraged economic reprisals designed to reduce imports of Japanese goods into China, cut sales of Japanese companies in the Chinese market, and prevent Chinese tourists from visiting Japan. The official Xinhua news agency said on Sept. 24 that by nationalizing the Senkakus, Japan "has challenged one of China's "core interests," which brook no compromise." In the latest economic reprisal, several big state-owned Chinese banks recently canceled their participation in events connected to the annual meeting this week (Oct. 9-14) of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, which Japan is hosting in Tokyo. The report posted on the PACOM website says that China's strategy to inflict selective economic pain is being systematically deployed against countries that challenge its interests in territorial disputes and defy its settlement requests. This has serious implications for China's Asia-Pacific neighbors. From Japan to Australia, they have become increasingly dependent on Chinese trade, investment and tourism for their economic health. Japan has also flirted with economic reprisals over territorial issues with South Korea. In August, after South Korean President Lee Myung Bak, visited the Liancourt Rocks (Takeshima islets) in the sea between Japan and South Korea, Japan's Finance Minister Jun Azumi canceled a planned meeting with his South Korean counterpart. The mountain tops jutting from the sea have been occupied and fortified by South Korea, although they are claimed by Japan. Tokyo also hinted it might reconsider a plan to buy South Korean sovereign debt and let an expanded currency-swap agreement with South Korea expire this month rather than renew it. However, Japan has territorial disputes with relatively few countries. China is an irredentist leader among major powers. It lays claim to land, sea, seabed and island territory that many of its neighbors also claim. These claimants include not only Japan, but also South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia and India. Three of them — Japan, South Korea and the Philippines — are U.S. allies and Washington is obliged by an act of Congress to provide self-defense assistance to Taiwan, which Beijing regards as a renegade province. The PACOM report says China realizes that U.S. military and economic power still far exceeds its own. "Understanding this, China concluded that it would be foolhardy to engage in frontal military challenges with the U.S.," the report states. "In addition, because the U.S. might be called into action should China engage another nation militarily in the Asia-Pacific region or elsewhere, China found it beneficial to adopt a guerrilla economic warfare strategy when it wanted to make known and impose its will." The report adds that this strategy "allows China to play the role of a puppeteer that administers pain surgically, but not beyond the point at which the puppet can recover and the economic relationship (be) resumed." Still, there is debate even within China about how far it can apply economic leverage against other countries, particularly major economies like Japan, without inflicting unacceptable pain on itself. In 2011, Sino-Japanese trade accounted for nearly 21 percent of Japan's total trade, but only 9.4 percent to China's overall trade, prompting Mei Xinyu, a researcher at a think-tank linked to the Commerce ministry in Beijing, to conclude that China would "lose less than Japan if economic and trade wars have to be our choice ultimately." However, an online analysis by the Chinese magazine Caixin on Sept. 26 concluded that any major disruption to China-Japan trade, which was worth $340 billion last year, would hurt both countries. It said that China would suffer serious foreign investment, job and technology losses. "A consideration of our national interests demands that we separate politics from economics," Caixin said. "Economic sanctions remain a strategic tool of the Chinese government, but they must be wielded wisely." Prolonged or worsening economic and political tensions between China and Japan could aggravate the growth slowdown across Asia. In addition, it could disrupt moves toward closer regional integration and the building of an East Asian free trade zone linking the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) with China, Japan and South Korea. Negotiations between the three Northeast Asian industrial powerhouses, each of which has a free trade agreement or comprehensive economic partnership with ASEAN, were to begin in Seoul late last month. But they were called off, apparently by China. "We hope the suspension is temporary," said Chen Yulu, a professor at China's Renmin University and an adviser to the monetary policy committee of China's central bank. "It will be a big loss for Asia if the process is terminated." Sourced: japantimes

Recommended Cambodia Tours

Cambodia Day Tours

Cambodia Day Tours

Angkor Temple Tours

Angkor Temple Tours

Cambodia Classic Tours

Cambodia Classic Tours

Promotion Tours

Promotion Tours

Adventure Tours

Adventure Tours

Cycling Tours

Cycling Tours