The View | Why US will fail to scuttle China’s economic integration with the rest of Asia

  • In the past, America’s push for globalisation has benefited the region. Now less dominant in the world economy, the US hopes to reverse such integration to undermine China, but it won’t succeed

A container ship sails towards Shanghai’s Yangshan Port on April 27. China today can offer more than deep pockets in Asia’s economic development. Photo: Xinhua via AP
It is fitting that US President Joe Biden launched the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) – perhaps heralding a turn away from globalisation – in Tokyo. After all, post-war globalisation began in earnest in Japan – starting in the 1950s and blossoming in the 1960s – against the backdrop of the Cold War and in the aftermath of the Korean war.

Japan’s successful export economy inspired the Four Asian Dragons (also known as the Four Asian Tigers), which were led by authoritarian governments except for Hong Kong, which was ruled by a London-appointed governor. These two initial phases of East Asian globalisation created global companies such as Sony, Samsung, Toyota and Hyundai – made possible by access to the US and European markets.

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