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The worldwide impact of China's modernization | |
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Each generation deals with big changes, but today's world is experiencing a perfect storm of seismic disruptions in the balance of power, a technological transformation, and a climate crisis. China is central to each of these, and how the country manages its internal challenges will affect the people of China and the rest of the world. It's a highly charged international environment that China must cope with. The United States appears to be hopelessly polarized and is therefore unpredictable. Russia's conflict with Ukraine seems to have thrust Europe back into a traditional battle of wills. We are in a more pessimistic era than the world has known for decades and this brings real risks of miscalculations contributing to a downward spiral of confrontation and conflict. Meanwhile, China's ambitious building of new institutions and platforms for interdependence across large areas of the world, from the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and BRICS to the Belt and Road Initiative, is interpreted in the West as reshaping the world order. But it can be observed that to contribute to stability, international cooperation and development, all are much needed in tumultuous times. We are also seeing a retreat into nationalist protectionism. The U.S. has levied 100-percent tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles and 50-percent tariffs on solar cells, and has gradually tightened restrictions on Chinese access to high-end semiconductors. U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump is threatening 60-percent (or more) tariffs on all imports from China. None of this makes economic sense but populism has mobilized strong constituencies in Europe as well as the U.S. against a level playing field for trade. China has benefited––and the world enjoys net benefits––from free trade. Hopefully, China can resist the temptation to join a tit-for-tat trade war. Reform of the World Trade Organization will be in everyone's interests, as would greater transparency around subsidies provided to nurture industries by all major economies. Perhaps China's most significant contribution in the coming years will be its leading role in combating climate change. This is the slow crisis the world has seen coming, but we are approaching a tipping point this decade if we cannot slow global warming. The switch to renewable energy is well underway, with China's rapid transition a major reason why world leaders agreed at UN Climate Change Conference in 2023 to triple renewable energy output by 2030. China is also leading the world in the rollout of new-energy vehicles. The smart digitalization and greening of all industries are underway. China accounts for around 30 percent of the world's industrial production; therefore, a green China will mean a greener world. Besides these big global disruptions, China has many internal challenges. It is transitioning from the heady, high-growth era to inevitably slower growth that must be more balanced. The country needs less speculative real estate development and more productive investment in the industries of the future. It needs to manage the demographic challenge of a declining workforce while ensuring there are enough new, well-paid jobs as new technologies eliminate some of the old low-paid jobs. A climate of dialogue and understanding between major powers on how to provide confidence and security would go a long way here, rather than the recent tendency of fear and blame. Many global leadership changes are underway this year, so there may yet be some room for innovation and initiatives that could stabilize the international environment, rather than continue the recent downward spiral. The Third Plenary Session of the 20th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, held in Beijing from July 15 to 18, sought to find solutions to some tricky economic problems in a complex, global environment. All this will require hard work, but nobody ever accused Chinese people of avoiding hard work. The bottom line for the world—that should provide some confidence for the medium term—is that China has built an impressive infrastructure for trade and can contribute to a more sustainable international environment as it trades, invests and disseminates the green technologies of the future. The author is president of 1Earth Village, a senior fellow at the Center for China and Globalization, and a former Australian and multilateral diplomat. This article was first published on the China Focus website Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to yanwei@cicgamericas.com |
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