One of the
(many) ironies of Donald Trump’s emergence is the general dislike for him in
East Asia, especially among American allies, who clearly want Hillary Clinton
to win the presidency. After all, “Trumpism” actually reflects fairly
accurately the practice of how much of East Asia is governed. To be sure, East
Asian elites are not much like Trump himself—thankfully. They are businesslike
(to the point of leaden), not prone to outbursts, far more serious and well
versed, and so on. But Trumpism is more or less the unstated ruling consensus
in places like Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and China. Consider a few
issues.
Immigration & Ethnicity
Japan and South Korea have some of the lowest immigration rates in the
developed world. This is by design; it is difficult to obtain long-term visas
for anyone who is not an English teacher. The nonnative populations of South
Korea and Japan are in the low single digits—and those that do live there are
almost always an out-group, rarely occupying positions of authority in the
private or public sector. China, technically with over fifty distinct
ethnicities, has “Han-washed” these cultures and standardized languages and
customs throughout its borders. It has “encouraged” Han internal immigration to
non-Han areas, most famously Tibet, and enforces standardized Mandarin in
public schools to compel integration.
Trump has called for a complete ban on
Muslims entering the country, and has questioned accepting Syrian refugees.
Like Trump’s base, East Asia is intensely critical of Islam and has accepted
virtually no refugees from the Middle East. The select few that do make it face
discrimination and diminished expectations, and even in democracies like Japan
and Korea, they are treated poorly. Muslims in China are
repressed and suspect; in Singapore they are informally locked out of power.
Trade & Mercantilism
In addition to congruent views on
immigration, Japan, Korea and China share similar Trumpian views on trade:
there is a finite amount of pie on the table, and a bigger slice for others
means a smaller slice for us. Trump’s evaluation of agreements like the
Trans-Pacific Partnership and the North American Free Trade Agreement as “bad
deals” that allow the other to “take advantage of us” mirrors mercantilist
attitudes in East Asian agricultural and manufacturing industries. Even democracies
like Japan and Korea continue to throw up non-trade barriers to protect their
national champions: take, for example, the half trillion in government
subsidies dished out to Korea’s biggest conglomerates last year—Samsung, LG and
Hyundai, to name a few.
China, of course, is worse. The difficulty
foreign firms have there—with corrupt officials, politicized investigations or
tax treatments, corporate espionage and so on—are well-known. Some of the
world’s largest tech companies, arguably America’s foremost export, have
limited footprints in the country, ceding market share to Chinese domestic
alternatives. When deals are completed for foreign company expansion, there are
often the result of joint ventures between Chinese firms and private
international entities. These arrangements frequently insist on technology
transfers and other concessionary privileges in exchange for market access.
This sounds much like what Trump wants to do.
China also uses trade as a geopolitical
weapon, as Trump proposes. When the Philippines tangled with China over the Scarborough Shoal in
2012, China immediately stopped accepting bananas, mangoes and other
tropical fruits, which represent a significant portion of Philippine exports.
Only once Manila backed down and withdrew its complaint did trade flows resume.
Semi-Authoritarianism and Dislike for Free Media
Trump’s authoritarian flirtation is also
reflective of East Asia’s political style, where executives are very powerful,
legislatures are weak, media are crippled by libel laws and ties to state
actors or corporations, rule of law is often bent to accommodate wealthy
businessmen and nationalist pressure, and so on. Taiwan, South Korea and Japan all
have outsized executives, only weakly constrained by legislatures. I have had
students refer to the South Korean presidency as an elected monarch. In these
system, decisionmaking comes from the top, and there is little the opposition
can do in key areas such as foreign policy or criminal justice.
Civil liberties in China, South Korea and
Japan are relatively weak. Trump, in his calls to deport eleven million people
and his removal of journalists from events, are eerily similar to South Korea
revoking the passport of a Japanese reporter and trying him for defamation.
Large parts of the internet are entirely blocked in China. Japan has dropped to seventy-second out 180
nations on the World Press Freedom Index, behind such countries as Madagascar,
Georgia and Niger.
At bottom, then, East Asia is very much of
the modernist-nationalist mindset regarding the state and its borders. When
Trump says, “if you want to have a country, you have to have borders,” East
Asia embodies that today probably more than any other part of the world. Since
the 1980s, Trump has followed—as much as he is able to, I suppose—Asia; he was
an original Japan-basher back in the day. What an
irony that, for as much as he dislikes the region, he is now importing its
mercantilist-nationalist trade model to the United States.
Robert
E. Kelly (@Robert_E_Kelly) is an associate
professor in the Department of Political Science at Pusan National University
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