Australian politicians often say ‘Australia-China
relations are crucial to Australia’s development and prosperity’. Many hope the
China–Australia FTA, due to be signed later this year, will be the shot in the
arm Australia’s economy needs.
But there are very few people who know how to capitalise on this
injection. Australia has a track-record of underutilising its FTAs, and Australia needs more Asia-capable
people in public and private leadership roles so that it can fully embrace the
risks and rewards of its increasing, and increasingly necessary, exposure to
the Chinese and other Asian economies.
A recent policy
paper by the Australia–China Young Professionals Initiative (ACYPI)
suggests that many young professionals have a highly evolved Asia skillset. But
many departments and businesses, and their respective leaders, still suffer
from ‘Asia-apprehension’.
Asia-apprehension starts small — a lack of understanding or an inability
to talk clearly and thoughtfully about Asia. But it quickly grows into a big
handbrake on the ‘Asia potential’ of Australian business. Left unresolved, the
apprehension quickly becomes an inability to ‘sell’ the business case for new
Asian opportunities. Eventually, this may lead to a parochial and risk-averse
organisational culture.
Young professionals believe the problem is at the top. Organisation
leaders must learn to leverage their Asia talent. Australia’s long-term
prosperity depends on the next generation of young professionals with the
skills to design, manufacture, market and sell Australian products and services
to the growing Asian middle class.
Australia needs confident, far-sighted leadership aimed at engaging with
China and Asia. Young Australian professionals are clearly focused on China and
the Asian region and they want more action from government and business.
The 2012 Asian Century White Paper helped change the rhetoric of
China-engagement. But in 2013 more than 60 per cent of survey respondents had
neutral or no sense of the White Paper’s core recommendations. In 2014, 71 per
cent felt they had no leadership support for gaining Asian work experience.
ACYPI suggests two potential answers to this problem of
Asia-apprehension.
Government and business must be proactive in taking the China-engagement rhetoric from paper into practice.
China-literacy is not necessary, but confidence in engaging with China is
essential. Business and government leaders must recognise a China strategy is a
long-term investment in their social capital. Leaders should build the Asia
literacy of their own staff and promote leaders with strong Asian ties or
backgrounds. It is these people that open doors and unlock opportunities.
During key executive meetings, organisations should be asking: How is our China
and Asia strategy reflected in what was discussed today? If the answer is ‘we
don’t know’ then the wrong people are in the room.
Australia also needs a bottom–up solution. Education (and continuing education) is crucial. There is a
growing perception that China scholarships and funding have reached a
saturation point. Support for such initiatives declined by more than 20 per
cent from 2013 to 2014. The core challenge identified by respondents is to
increase applicants for these scholarships and focus on improving cultural
knowledge in the broader community. State governments should introduce
compulsory Asian language training from kindergarten to Year 10. Governments
should also introduce tax-deductible continuing education policies to
incentivise Australians to further take up Asia literacy and cultural awareness
courses.
But the solution to the Asian language problem is also one of demand. If
parents demand their children learn an Asian language instead of a European one
then schools should respond. Italian is a lovely language, but Australian exports to Italy are only AU$1.2 billion (US$937 million). By
contrast Australian exports to Indonesia are valued at almost AU$7 billion (US$5.4
billion). Indonesia’s GDP grew by roughly 5 per cent in 2014. By contrast
Italy’s GDP was roughly unchanged over the same period. Based on the numbers
alone perhaps parents should be more proactive by selecting schools offering
Indonesian.
The China–Australia FTA is not a panacea. The cure will come from real
people with the skills to market Australian products and services into the
growing Asian middle class. Whenever businesses and government discuss
Australia’s competiveness and future productivity, China (and Asia more
broadly) must be part of the discussion. There is much low-hanging fruit that
Australian companies can take advantage of to support Asian literacy among their staff. Investment in social capital
now will yield immense dividends in the medium to long term, and policy settings
should reflect and incentivise such investment.
Edward Kus volunteers as the
Executive Director of the Australia–China Young Professionals Initiative and
works as a solicitor in Melbourne.
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