As we set our eyes on the long
horizon of economic integration we should not neglect the important role ASEAN
can play in the wider region today.
This has been a year of high
expectations and of disappointment in Southeast Asia. Rarely has the economic
and strategic importance of the region been as apparent. As China’s economy
transitions towards “a new normal” marked by lower growth, structural and
financial reform, and as the other BRICS markets have also slowed, investors
have looked to ASEAN, with its favourable demographics and market-oriented
economies, as both an alternative and a complementary market to China.
ASEAN’s prospects have often been
approached through the criteria of economic integration. Hopes have centred on
the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC), which is being inaugurated as we speak. The
bold language of “a single market and production base” and of the launch of an
economic community implies a change in the way business will be done in
Southeast Asia. The reality is slow and incremental progress.
Don’t
expect radical change
There is already a free trade regime
for most goods. Progress has been slower on the more difficult issues of
non-trade barriers, trade in services, financial services integration, customs
harmonisation and the movement of labour and talent. The AEC will not be
raising the curtain on any radical change.
On the strategic front, growing
US-China rivalry over Southeast Asia seems to have exceeded ASEAN’s ability to
come up with a unified response. ASEAN ministers were unable to conclude with
their customary joint declaration after their meeting in Kuala Lumpur earlier
this month. ASEAN’s powerlessness before regional “non-traditional security
threats,” such as human-induced forest fires in Indonesia, is a stark reminder
of ASEAN’s lack of institutional capability and its inability to transcend
nationalist sentiment.
Regional political integration needs
national governments regarded by their own people as representative and
legitimate. While representative democracy and the rule of law have leapt
forward in Myanmar and been confirmed emphatically in Indonesia, Thailand
remains under military rule and Malaysia, this year’s chair of ASEAN, is in
deep political crisis. The year has also seen progress towards a Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement that bisects ASEAN and raises questions about the
relevance of the AEC.
Paradox
of ASEAN weakness
ASEAN’s continuing weakness at a
time when stakes are high and centrifugal pressures great might tempt us to
dismiss its prospects. Paradoxically ASEAN is more relevant than ever. ASEAN
remains the platform for a range of diplomatic and economic activities that are
critical to the future of Asia at a time when international order is challenged
by long term developments in Asia. ASEAN’s central role in regional
multilateralism makes it uniquely placed to help shape events.
The opening of China has already
unleashed the largest mobilisation of people and productive forces in human
history. Change on this scale cannot but disrupt the present order, both
economic and strategic, social and cultural.
China is already ASEAN’s largest
trading partner, collectively and country by country. ASEAN is linked to China
by global supply chains that will grow more complex and multi-dimensional as
the Chinese economy undergoes structural reform.
China’s
One Belt One Road: a generational project
The question is not how to preserve
a status quo that is already over but how global order is changing, and what
role we can have in influencing the direction of that change. ASEAN’s sparse
achievements in integration belie its value in the moving context of a changing
Asia Pacific and a changing world. While rightly attending to the continuing
work of ASEAN integration, we should not miss the bigger picture of ASEAN’s
significance in the midst of change.
China’s One Belt One Road initiative
is a generational project integral to its economic transition and its ‘peaceful
rise’. It envisions a set of corridors of economic integration, opened up by a
network of overland and maritime connectivity, that will span Eurasia, and join
Southeast and East Asia with Central Asia, the Middle East and Europe. It means
building new networks of global partnership, and forging bilateral and
multilateral cooperation with more than sixty other countries. It means a new
economic geography for Asia.
The investments planned under OBOR
are much needed in Southeast Asia, but the multi-stakeholder, multilateral
partnerships needed to make such investments work are going to be hard to put
together. ASEAN would have a lot to offer from its resources in
multilateralism. China should look to
ASEAN
as a partner for OBOR.
China’s rise is re-ordering
strategic relations and reshaping relationships in trade, investment and
culture. It will reshape the networks, including the physical links between
China and the rest of the world, but nowhere else more in Southeast Asia. While
these developments are rich with promise, they are also viewed with anxiety,
particularly by incumbent regional powers, the US and Japan, and by regional
powers such as India. Through multilateral efforts that draw in all these
players, ASEAN has stood for for mutually beneficial collaboration rather than
destructive rivalry, engagement rather than containment.
ASEAN:
hub of multilateralism
Southeast Asia has long served as an
arena of great power relations and rivalry. In the last four decades, however,
ASEAN has served as a platform for confidence building and collaboration across
Asia and the Pacific through institutions such as the ASEAN Regional Forum and
the East Asia Summit. Even with all its internal weaknesses, ASEAN, as its
diplomats rightly insist, remains ‘central’ to a set of regional discussions
and formal and informal links that tie the interests of the US, China and Japan
together.
ASEAN’s experience and credibility
as the hub of multilateralism in the wider region is important in helping the
wider region adapt to the economic and strategic rise of China. That rise is
provoking a reaction from conservative elements in the US and Japan. Dire
predictions are being made with examples drawn from the Peloponnesian Wars. The
US ‘pivot to Asia’ and a similar heightening and securitisation of Japan’s
engagement with Southeast Asian countries, are, at least in part, driven by
such fears.
The fears are understandable, and so
is the fact that the very ground of global order is shifting beneath our feet.
Our analytical and policy frameworks have time and again failed to capture the
full scope of the change we are living through. Our efforts to cope amidst this
uncertainty and dynamism must leave room for experiment, evolution, and
tolerance for ambiguity. ASEAN must be a partner for the interested parties to
come together to bring about a new regional order that can accommodate the
dynamism of the peoples of Asia.
This makes ASEAN a vital platform,
and beyond that a key partner, for China to work out, convey and exemplify its
peaceful rise. ASEAN’s fluidity and its lack of institutional strength may not
always be a handicap in a global context of massive change and strategic
anxiety.
ASEAN is no threat to any major
power. It has never been “a global player” in its own right, but in its
diplomacy of dialogue and consensus building over 48 years, it has managed to
become a useful forum and partner for global players working out new
arrangements of co-existence. The promise of ASEAN should not be undervalued.
About the Author
About the Author
*John Pang is a Senior Fellow with the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological
University, Singapore.
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