Think Asia Will Dominate the 21st Century? Think Again
For far too long, but especially during the
Obama years, policymakers chose to focus on Asia’s remarkable economic growth,
coupled with an era of relative peace. Too often they overlooked economic,
demographic, social, political and military tensions that did not lurk all that
far below Asia’s shiny surface.
Barack Obama, who spent part of his formative years in Indonesia, was a
leading cheerleader for the concept of the Asian century. He seemed to care
little about Europe and preferred to avoid the troubles of the Middle East as
much as possible. He embraced the notion of a rising Asia that soon would
constitute America’s most vital interests. It was in that spirit, too, that
Hillary Clinton announced the “pivot to Asia,” which was meant to refocus
American military power and political and economic priorities away from Europe
and the Middle East and instead underscore Asia’s importance to the United
States.
Of course, much of the Middle East is in Asia; so too are five former
Soviet republics; so too is Afghanistan. But when Obama and Hillary Clinton
referred to Asia, they generally meant East Asia, though at times they expanded
their definition to include South Asia, employing the term “Indo-Pacific.” But
their focus was primarily on East and Southeast Asia, and particularly on
China, Japan, Korea and five of the eight ASEAN states—Indonesia, Malaysia,
Singapore, Vietnam and Thailand. It is these countries, plus India, that
constitute Asia’s economic powerhouses (Brunei is an oil-rich country having
more in common economically with the states of the Arabian Gulf than with its
ASEAN partners). Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar lag far behind in political and
economic development. Auslin likewise pays them far less attention than he does
to their more advanced ASEAN partners, though the Obama administration,
consistent with its policy of outreach to enemies and other subjects of
long-time American sanctions, moved quickly to improve relations with Myanmar
when the “Burmese Spring” blossomed in 2010.
Auslin asks what he terms “inconvenient questions,” such as: “How
resilient are Asian countries to economic shocks? How adaptable are leading
economic sectors and government policies?” Of course, the answers depend on the
country in question. But Auslin rightly recognizes that these issues are not
unique to any one state in the region and are common to virtually all of them.
As he points out,
Asian countries, developed and developing alike, face significant
challenges. . . . Demand from Western countries will possibly level off as
those societies age and as incomes remain stagnant. . . . Corruption,
malinvestment, and waste eat away at economic efficiency.
AS AUSLIN demonstrates, China is the prime exemplar of these
developments. Chinese economic statistics, never fully reliable, continue to be
adjusted downward. Wages have risen sharply over the past decade; indeed, for
several years, the minimum wage was growing at double digits—as high as 18
percent. The Chinese banking system remains opaque, and bank balance sheets are
unreliable, as they continue to overstate the value of their assets, notably
state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Moreover, obtaining financing in China often
requires connections in Beijing, further undermining the efficiency of the
banking system. Finally, local and provincial regulations often impede business
growth, while corruption, particularly at those levels, remains rampant,
despite President Xi Jinping’s ongoing efforts to clean house. Lastly, Auslin
rightly identifies yet another scourge that China—and other Asian
economies—suffer from: Mafia-like intimidation, or worse, of foreign investors.
Not surprisingly, companies that are contemplating investment in East Asia are
looking more and more at Vietnam, Malaysia or Indonesia, or even the
Philippines, rather than risk shrinking margins in China.
The SOEs are an albatross around China’s economic neck, yet even the
increasingly powerful Xi, recently crowned China’s “core leader,” has been unable to shut most of
them down. The management, ownership and finances of many private businesses
also are opaque. Often, businesses that are nominally private are actually
owned by the government through a complex chain of holding companies. This is
particularly the case with respect to firms in the high-tech and aerospace
sectors.
The era of untrammeled Chinese economic growth appears to be over—and
that development naturally does not account for whatever actions a new Trump
administration will take to even the playing field of Chinese-American trade.
Should the administration initiate steps that would lead to a trade war with
Beijing, it would seriously affect the American economy, but devastate China’s.
U.S. economic fundamentals are strong, and may even be getting stronger, while
China, as Auslin notes, has not yet achieved sustainable development. China’s
economic vicissitudes are far from over.
It is not clear to what extent the Trump administration will also
identify a playing field with Japan that it will seek to “level” with respect
to trade. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made a point out of being the first foreign
leader to visit the president-elect, and emerged from their meeting satisfied
that Donald Trump had acquired a much better understanding of Japan’s
importance as an American ally. Abe has pushed the Japanese political, military
and economic envelope well beyond previous limits. But his efforts to stimulate
an economy that has sagged for more than two decades have yielded significantly
fewer results than he and his voters anticipated. Japan, once the world’s
leader in a myriad of industries ranging from shipbuilding to electronics to
semiconductors, leads only in automobiles today—and even then, the emergence of
driverless automobiles may rob Japan of its leadership in that field as well.
While Abe has opened its economy to some extent, it remains committed to
export-driven growth. It continues to protect its telecommunications and
pharmaceutical industries, and has few foreign workers, fewer foreign business
executives and, more generally, a cultural fear of foreign competition that Abe
has only marginally succeeded in allaying. The 2008 financial crisis hit Japan
particularly hard, and the 2011 Fukushima disaster, even harder. The country is
still struggling to recover from both.
Japan had been a reluctant signatory of the Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP). That Trump was determined to do away with that deal, or at least
renegotiate it on terms he assures Americans will be “better,” is no favor to
Japan. That the final four presidential candidates—Socialist-cum-Democrat
Bernie Sanders and Republican Ted Cruz, who did not win their party’s
respective nominations, and Hillary Clinton and Trump, who did—all opposed
signing the TPP, sent a strong signal to America’s Asian trading partners that
they faced even rougher economic times ahead. For Japan, the largest American
trading partner within the proposed, now seemingly defunct, TPP, this was not
good news at all.
Auslin is reluctant to write Japan off, as some analysts have already
done: “Japan is all too easily caricatured as a has-been nation.” But he
recognizes that even Abe’s reforms have hardly dented the country’s economic
culture and long-standing protectionist practices. While he voices the pious
hope that Japanese companies will begin to accept the levels of risk and
entrepreneurship that are the essence of the disruptive technologies that drive
dynamic economies, he sensibly is not sure when, and if, that ever will happen.
Auslin correctly identifies the stultifying impact of the chaebol
network of business conglomerates on the Korean economy. While Seoul’s
manufacturing sector has propelled it to world leadership in shipbuilding
(where it has overtaken Japan), flat-screen televisions, and other products,
size and government protection afforded to the chaebol block smaller firms from
entering Korea’s market in any meaningful way. Moreover, the chaebol have
frequently been accused of bribery and buying political influence. As he puts
it, “Another risk factor in South Korea’s system . . . is that the larger and
more important giants like Samsung become to the economy, the more important it
is that they not make bad bets.”
Auslin could not have anticipated just how right he was, because Samsung
made a terrible bet. Even as his volume was hitting the shelves of bookstores,
South Korea was becoming engulfed in the biggest scandal of its history, with
Samsung at its center. The impeachment of President Park Geun-hye, and the warrant for the arrest of Samsung Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong
on charges of bribing her (Lee, who was subsequently released for lack of
evidence, is the son of chairman Lee Kun-hee, himself twice convicted of
bribery) highlight the poisonous impact of the chaebol and the unbalanced and
flawed nature of the South Korean economy. As if that were not enough,
Samsung’s Galaxy S7 smartphone has proved a literal fire hazard; airlines
forbid passengers from taking it onboard. Samsung is already releasing a Galaxy
S8; whether Samsung, and the chaebol system, will emerge unscathed from the
bribery scandal, as has been the case in the past, is entirely another matter.
AUSLIN IS just somewhat more optimistic about the economies of the
smaller, yet growing, Southeast Asian economies. Recalling his rides through
Hanoi on a motor scooter—the book has numerous personal vignettes that enliven
its hard analysis—he hails Vietnam’s dynamism, a sure contrast to stagnant
Japan. Unlike Japan, Vietnam has a young population; its long coastline offers
the potential of becoming a regional logistics hub; cars continue to replace
bicycles, a sure sign of rising economic growth and concomitant living
standards. Foreign direct investment continues to grow, in part, due to China’s
declining attractiveness to investors.
But Vietnam has inbuilt structural problems that are not likely to
disappear any time soon. The Communist Party’s control, as in China, is a
vehicle for serious diseconomies. Like China, Vietnam has its own baggage of
SOEs; it too lacks transparency and its statistics are suspect. Its
export-driven economic strategy renders it vulnerable to disruptions in
trade—it will also be hurt by the disappearance of TPP. Moreover, its
population is undereducated, meaning that while it can provide workers for the
shop floor, it has yet to develop a sufficiently large, technology-savvy cohort
that is the key to consistent long-term growth in the twenty-first century.
Yet Vietnam is probably better off than many of its ASEAN partners in
terms of its future economic prospects. Indonesia’s geography and ethnic
diversity, its heavy reliance on commodities and agriculture, and its
protectionism and dithering government policies have undermined its economic
promise. Malaysia has been moving away from being solely a commodity producer,
but it still has some distance to travel in that regard. In addition,
long-standing tensions between its wealthier Chinese minority and the Malay
majority are never far below the surface, given the government’s
affirmative-action programs for Malays.
Auslin has little to say about Malaysia’s economic circumstances, and
even less about some of the other ASEAN states. The economic success of
Singapore, the most dynamic of the group, barely receives mention. As a
multiethnic city-state, it could easily have remained the economic backwater
that it was in the aftermath of World War II. How Lee Kuan Yew’s legacy
continues to fuel Singapore’s economic miracle certainly deserved more of
Auslin’s attention, if only to explain why its model is not really applicable
to its ASEAN partners.
No discussion of Asia’s future, particularly in the economic realm, can
omit India, whose economic growth exceeds China’s and whose population will
soon do the same. India’s key economic hubs are world class. Bangalore is the
center of a dynamic aerospace industry. Chennai is, in Auslin’s words, India’s
“Detroit.” And he does not even mention Bollywood, the Hindi-language film
industry based in Mumbai. The films produced there are distributed worldwide,
and are growing in sophistication, though they still often have the
song-and-dance routines that Americans will identify with the movie Slumdog
Millionaire. India produces and exports non-Hindi language films as well,
and its film industry rivals Hollywood in terms of the number of people
employed and the number of films produced.
Nevertheless, despite its huge and well-educated middle class, India
remains hobbled by everything from an infuriating bureaucracy, which certainly
rivals all others for its ability to strangle anything in red tape, to an
infrastructure so poor that it often makes more sense to fly even short
distances than risk endless traffic jams resulting from U-turns by camel carts
or cows blocking the road. Moreover, a huge, young and undereducated lower
class, which often still suffers from caste-based discrimination, has never
truly disappeared from the nation’s social structure.
The economic challenges that Asian states confront today, or likely will
tomorrow, constitute only one of the four interlocking risk areas that Auslin
maps for his readers. Demographics are working against the Asian states as
well. For some, like Japan, it is an aging population, aggravated by women
marrying later in life, or not marrying at all. Auslin recalls chatting with a
forty-year-old woman at a Tokyo lunch counter who told him that her greatest
fear was neither terrorism nor the economy, but growing old alone. Yet while
the lady may worry less about the economy, it is the economy that is paying the
price of a majority-elderly population, in terms of pensions and social
assistance. Such entitlements drain government budgets—as they are increasingly
doing in the United States—and limit government spending in other much-needed
areas.
Auslin points to other, less obvious social challenges to the country’s
future. He notes the increase in the number of stay-at-home young Japanese who
opt out of the labor market, and the decline in Japanese students studying
abroad. His visit to a Toyota plant gave him “a dystopian vision of Japan’s
future.” Robotics is not only an area in which Japan hopes to maintain its
position as a world leader; it is also a vehicle for “simply ensuring that
production can continue” at all. There can be little doubt that all these
developments pose serious challenges for Japan’s economic future. Prime
Minister Abe is attempting to initiate small steps to bring foreign workers
into the country—though, significantly, not to let them permanently immigrate.
Old prejudices die hard.
Japan is not alone in confronting the economic and social implications
of unfavorable demographics. Some studies project that South Korea’s population
will drop by 80 percent over the course of the century. Hong Kong, Singapore
and Taiwan also face declining populations due to low fertility rates, and
Taiwan, like South Korea and Japan, is hampered by its general unwillingness to
accept immigrants.
For India and the ASEAN states, apart from Singapore—the exception in so
many ways—it is a youthful population that constitutes a major challenge and
risk. Poorly educated young people can support these countries’ low-value-added
activities, such as low-tech agriculture or processing natural resources, but
they cannot provide the ballast for breaking into more sophisticated
industries. Yet India and most of the ASEAN states simply do not have, and are
having trouble establishing, an education system that will prepare young people
for employment in leading manufacturing fields, much less those of high
technology. Auslin recounts his visits to universities around the region
(Singapore excepted, yet again). He found them woefully short of resources,
though packed with students. He also devotes special attention to India’s
horrendous treatment of women, with its all-too-frequent mob outbursts
and rapes that garner worldwide attention. “There is no real movement for
female emancipation in India,” he laments.
THEN THERE is China, with respect to demographics, as in all other
areas, an entity unto itself. Its long-standing one-child policy, coupled with
the desire of many families to ensure that the child was male (and thereby
aborting female fetuses) has rendered the country not only facing a demographic
decline but also one where males will far outnumber females. In addition, the
flow of rural Chinese to the country’s megacities continues apace, with many
workers calling factory dormitories their home. Respiratory disease, resulting
from China’s refusal (until recently) to face up to the consequences of air
pollution, has become one of the country’s leading causes of death. The lack of
other environmental controls, such as those controlling the dumping of chemical
waste, has been the cause of disease and death as well.
China’s huge aging population will require a national safety net that
barely exists today, because the parents of one-child families will not have a
network of children to support them. That in turn will create new strains on
the budgets of both the central and provincial governments, at a time when the
general demand for improved social programs will continue to grow. These
developments, and their impact on social stability, will continue to be cause
for concern for the Communist Party, whose primary objective is, as it has
always been, to remain in power.
When Auslin turns to questions of political stability, he identifies
risks that are equal to, if not more serious than, those of economics and demographics,
in part because they are all linked. Whatever else it might be, the Chinese
Communist Party (CCP) has been the country’s great unifying force. Yet, as
Auslin notes, “the lack of trust between citizen and state is probably the
single greatest risk to the CCP’s continued rule.” The lack of even moderate
political reform raises the risk of unleashing widespread disorder; in that
regard Auslin points to the Revolution of 1911. He could also have cited the
nineteenth-century Taiping rebellion against the Qing Dynasty that left up to
seventy million dead. The CCP’s dilemma is that its refusal to commit to any
serious political reforms—and its harsh response to protests such as those of
Tiananmen Square in 1989—increases the likelihood of regional- or warlord-based
rebellion and unrest that has marked the country’s history and is its greatest
nightmare.
Auslin observes that Japanese are both pessimistic about the future and
cynical about politics. In this they are not alone. The populations of the EU
are not much different, and have expressed themselves by veering toward leaders
whose commitment to liberal democracy is hazy at best. Japan’s leaders, Auslin
asserts, “have failed to give its citizens a compelling vision of their future
in which economic health is restored and Japan plays an important role in the
world.” The same could be said about the malaise that is gripping Europe.
Similarly, it is arguable that Korea’s population may well be tending in the
same pessimistic direction: certainly the latest scandal gives them good cause
to do so. That North Korea could try, as it has often done, to precipitate a
political crisis creates a unique danger for the South that only aggravates its
tense political environment.
The ASEAN states that are the subject of Auslin’s primary focus offer
little about which to be hopeful—again, with the possible exception of
Singapore. Though he rightly notes that Singapore’s restrictions on free speech
and related restraints on the media could lead to popular unrest, he concedes
that this is not the case today. Indeed, it is arguable that Singapore’s strong
economy and social safety nets, as well as its careful cultivation of Malay,
Indian and other minorities, all militate in favor of stability for the
foreseeable future.
Other ASEAN states may not be so fortunate. Indonesia currently is
relatively quiet, but it has faced insurrection in the past, notably in Aceh,
as well as religious tensions and violence, particularly in South Sulawesi
(surprisingly, Auslin does not mention either place). And, as a moderate Muslim
country, it continually faces the threat of religious extremism. Malaysia is
even more stable than Indonesia, in part because the government has protected
its Chinese population. Chinese have been the subject of past pogroms in both
Indonesia and Malaysia, however, and such eruptions could happen again.
Moreover, Malaysia is plagued by corruption and political infighting. Myanmar has yet
to come to terms with its Rohingya population, which it continues to persecute
(even the otherwise heroic Aung San Suu Kyi has been virtually silent about
their plight), while Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia all remain under the thumb of
authoritarian regimes. And then there is Thailand, racked by violence in the
south and political instability in its capital, and now without the unifying
presence of its long-time ruler King Bhumibol Adulyadej. His son and successor,
Vajiralongkorn, is an eccentric figure who had his dog promoted to three-star
general; he is unlikely to command the respect that his father did.
TURNING TO the region’s lack of political community, Auslin first
addresses the region’s lack of unifying organizations, such as NATO or the EU,
and the absence of any leader other than China, which its neighbors fear rather
than follow. Auslin fails to mention that there was once a regional alliance,
SEATO—the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization, consisting of the United States,
Australia, France, New Zealand, Pakistan (including East Pakistan, now
Bangladesh), the Philippines, Thailand and the United Kingdom. It was founded
thanks to an initiative by the American cold warrior and secretary of state,
John Foster Dulles, and more of its members were from outside Southeast Asia
than within it. As a military organization it never amounted to very much; its
member states contributed insufficient military or other resources to give it
much credibility. France and Britain refused to allow SEATO to support
America’s intervention in Laos in 1962, and prevented it from providing
political cover for the war in Vietnam. Pakistan withdrew from SEATO in 1972,
after it lost East Pakistan in its 1971 conflict with India. France stopped
providing funding in 1975, and the organization was dead not long thereafter.
Although few analysts and virtually no politicians mention the SEATO
experience today, it is arguable that its collapse was one reason why the East
Asian states shied away from a successor organization. America’s defeat in
Vietnam may have provided another reason for dealing cautiously with the West.
And the rise of China has led many of its neighbors to balance accommodation
with Beijing and an increasingly close—but not tight—relationship with the
United States without entering into formal treaties with Washington. Indeed,
formal alliances have not prevented both Thailand and especially the
Philippines from standing aloof from the United States; the 1951
U.S.-Philippines Treaty did not prevent Manila from closing down the American
naval base at Subic Bay and Clark Air Force Base exactly four decades later.
Ten Southeast Asian nations comprise the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations, or ASEAN, but the organization operates by consensus, and its
membership is so diverse that it often has difficulty taking a stand on an
issue involving one or more of its member states. In recent years, the ASEAN
Regional Forum, which includes China, India, Australia, Canada, Russia and the
United States as well as numerous others, has taken on some importance as a
venue for discussing security issues. Recent summit-level discussions at ASEAN+3
fora—Japan, China and South Korea—have afforded a vehicle for most leading East
Asian states (not all of them, as Auslin, asserts, since Papua New Guinea and
East Timor are not yet ASEAN members), to discuss issues of mutual concern. The
East Asian Summit, which includes ASEAN+3, plus India, Australia, New Zealand,
the United States and Russia, likewise has offered a vehicle for discussion.
The verb that characterizes all these meetings is “discuss”; in practice, they
are all little more than talking shops.
Auslin closes his analysis with an overview of the tensions that could
bring war to East Asia. He reviews the well-chronicled disputed claims to
sovereignty over the South China Sea’s Spratly and Paracel Islands, China’s
dubious nine-dash-line claim over virtually the entire sea, its ongoing
military buildup on the sea’s real or artificial rocks and its virtual seizure
of Scarborough Shoal from the Philippines. He also describes the tensions in
the East China Sea over the Japanese-administered Senkaku Islands (which China
calls Diaoyu); the Kuril Island dispute between Japan and Russia that dates back to the waning days of World War II; and the
Japanese dispute with Korea over what the former call the Takeshima Islands,
and the latter, Dokdo Islands
Though Japan is involved in three of the aforementioned disputes, no one
anticipates it going to war to resolve any of them. But China is another
matter. Auslin documents China’s growing military power—strategic nuclear,
naval, air and cyber. Beijing is not reluctant to flex its increasingly
powerful muscles. In response to Trump’s apparent flirtation with Taiwan, China
sent its one aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, through the Taiwan Strait,
forcing Taipei to scramble aircraft in response. Auslin correctly posits that
China does not want war, but, he adds, “Beijing is acting like a classic rising
challenger to the status quo.” The voyage of the Liaoning underscores
his point. Two decades ago, two U.S. carriers entered the Taiwan Strait in
response to Beijing’s firing missiles near the Taiwanese ports of Keelung and
Kaohsiung, and to demonstrate that China could not prevent the United States
from coming to Taiwan’s aid. Now it was China demonstrating that it too could
deploy a carrier to the Strait, and that it was capable of denying access to
American forces. Though he notes the ongoing threat of North Korean aggression,
especially as it seeks to wed its nuclear weapons with long-range missiles,
Auslin sees the “large and growing gulf between China and its neighbors” as the
region’s primary destabilizing factor. Whether or not he is right about the
relative gravity of threats from Pyongyang and Beijing, he certainly is correct
in noting the fundamental change to the regional balance resulting from China’s
military rise.
Auslin concludes his study by arguing that the greatest near-term danger
to Asian stability rests in the realm of security: “What should most worry us
is that nearly all . . . security risks . . . involve one or more of the
region’s great powers, including the United States. That creates the potential
for a larger confrontation.” Given the region’s inability to organize itself
for security in any meaningful way, Auslin looks to the United States to be the
anchor of regional stability, as it has been since World War II. To be
effective in the twenty-first century, Auslin calls for the United States to
foster a set of “concentric triangles,” an outer one consisting of Japan, South
Korea, India and Australia, and an inner one connecting India, Malaysia, the
Philippines and Singapore, with participation by Thailand and outreach to
Vietnam. Washington would be the catalyst, encouraging not only military
cooperation, but the creation of “a more liberal Indo-Pacific that provides
stability and opportunity for growth.” It is a worthy dream that is unlikely to
be realized any time soon.
Donald Trump’s election to the White House has cast a shadow over all
America’s alliances. At the same time, the smaller Asian states continue, with
great wariness, to balance their relationships with Beijing and Washington, and
are likely to be even more even-handed should Trump make good on some of his
promises, which he has already begun to do by ditching the TPP. In any event, it is hard to see America
playing a newly energized, activist role in Asia, other than in the military
sphere: Trump has promised a buildup that, if carried out, would result in a
more potent American military presence in Asia. Certainly, Auslin’s hopes for
Washington to work with other liberal democracies to spread democratic and
liberal values in Asia need to be put on hold for at least several years: Trump
has made it clear that he has no interest in democracy promotion.
The End of the Asian Century has its flaws: a rather sparse review of the challenges faced by
several of the poorer ASEAN states; little glitches, such as reference to
Singapore’s Sir Stamford Raffles (not Stanford); the statement that all of
NATO’s members were democracies (Spain and Portugal were dictatorships until
the mid-1970s); mention of the Gandhi dynasty (it was Jawarhalal Nehru’s
dynasty; and citing Argentina as the country of the future (actually, “Brazil
is the country of the future, and always will be”). But these errors, and a few
others like them, do not detract from what is surely an important study. For
what Auslin is telling us is that peace, stability and prosperity in Asia
cannot be taken for granted. That should be a warning—and a watchword—for the Trump
administration.
Dov S. Zakheim is vice chairman of the Center for the National Interest.
He was under secretary of defense (comptroller) from 2001 to 2004 and deputy
under secretary of defense (planning and resources) from 1985 to 1987.
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