What does
China’s rise as a major power mean for Australia?
The answer
depends on who you ask.
In March 2015 the Sydney Morning Herald’s International Editor,
Peter Hartcher, described China as a fascist state that bullies its own
citizens and neighbouring countries alike. That about sums up the ‘China
threat’ view.
Yet there’s also no shortage of CEOs gushing with praise for Chinese
government policies that are expected to deliver more than 850 million people
into the ranks of the middle class by the end of next decade.
Australian politicians spend a great deal of time listening to both ends
of the spectrum. In November 2014, Prime Minister Tony Abbott allegedly told
German Chancellor Angela Merkel that Australia’s policies towards China were driven by ‘fear and
greed’. Responding to this comment, Linda Jakobson, founder of the public
policy initiative, China Matters, remarked that ‘the Prime Minister
captured the bipolar nature of Australia’s attitude towards China’.
This may be true among Australian commentators, CEOs and politicians.
But there’s one important group in Australia to which the bipolar tag does not
apply: the general public.
In April 2015, the Australia–China Relations Institute (ACRI) surveyed
more than 1500 Australians to better understand their attitudes towards China’s
rise. The big finding was that on most questions it was the middle ground that
had the greatest support.
The ACRI survey started with the question about whether China will
replace the US as the region’s dominant power within the next 20 years. Those
who believed it ‘very likely’ (27.2 per cent) outnumbered those who thought it
was ‘not at all likely’ (7 per cent) by a ratio of nearly four to one. But an
even larger proportion took a middle of the road position and said it was
either ‘somewhat likely’ (40.9 per cent) or likely (25.0 per cent).
The majority are probably right. The consensus view of the IMF and the
OECD is that China will become the world’s largest economy sometime before
2030. But in per-capita terms it will remain well behind the US. And in terms
of military might, a 2014 report by the Kokoda Foundation made it plain that China
will take much longer to catch up.
The public did take a strong view that China’s rise would be good for
the Australian economy. Out of all of Australia’s free trade agreements, 44 per
cent said that the one with China will bring the biggest benefits. That
compares with 31 per cent, 20 per cent and 6 per cent nominating the free trade
agreements with the US, Japan and South Korea, respectively.
As far as the security impact goes, the extremes were rejected, particularly
at the negative end of the scale. If China did become the region’s dominant
power, less than 14 per cent of Australians thought this would be ‘very
damaging’ for Australian security. In contrast, nearly one-quarter said it
would be not damaging at all. Still, that means that 63 per cent took a
position somewhere in between.
Respondents were then asked if Australia should expand military
cooperation with the US to help counterbalance China’s growing military power
in Asia. Once more the extremes were shunned: nearly three-quarters of
Australians said this would be either ‘somewhat unwise’ or ‘wise’ (35.4 and
38.1 per cent respectively). That left just one-quarter opting either for ‘very
unwise’ (11.9 per cent) or ‘very wise’(14.7 per cent).
And on whether Australia should send its armed forces to join a war
against China in support of the US, fewer than one in ten (9.2 per cent) said
that it would be ‘very wise’ to go in with guns blazing. Nearly three times as
many were of the view that this would be ‘very unwise’(26.0 per cent).
The results show that most Australians don’t buy into the idea that a
more powerful China is an obvious threat to their national interest. But
unsurprisingly there is some caution: Australia and China have different political
systems, values, culture, history and language. And the elevation of China in
Australia’s national consciousness has been both recent and rapid.
That’s all the more reason for Australian leaders to avoid letting fear
dictate policy. Instead it provides a clear case for investing heavily to
better understand and explain this most complicated of bilateral relationships.
James Laurenceson is Deputy Director of the Australia–China Relations
Institute (ACRI), University of Technology, Sydney.
Hannah Bretherton is a
researcher at ACRI.
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