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  • 刘再复:直声满学院——怀念吴世昌先生 - 作者:刘再复 《刘再复散文精编第1卷师友纪事》2011年,第72-76頁 [image: Uploaded Image] 吴世昌先生是我尊敬的学者,鲍彤是我尊敬的改革思想者。而吴世昌先生又是鲍彤的舅父,所以,我怀念起吴世昌先生时总是想起鲍彤。而听到鲍彤的消息时,总是想起吴世昌先生。去年,我从《纽约时...
    15 小時前
  • Margaret Lee at Misako & Rosen - April 25 – May 31, 2026
    21 小時前
  • Hong Kong gov’t begins public consultation on fire safety reforms after Tai Po fire - [image: Wang Fuk Court on May 4, 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.]The Hong Kong government has launched a public consultation on proposed amendments to the city...
    22 小時前
  • 260526二午陰30°C 77%:為馬英九難過 - 佛誕3天連假後開工日。昨晚由深圳返港的人潮逼爆關口。 港零售不振的問題,怕要待被深圳在物價上大致拉平才能解決。 今晨看美台報,不幸的是,圍繞馬英九兩陣對圓的狐疑,大致有了分曉! 看來,前總統確有失智的不幸。醫院有過診斷,雖屬隱私(港稱“私隱”),拒絕評論,但可信是馬先生的配偶與...
    1 天前
  • 《你是不會當樹嗎》 - 《你是不會當樹嗎》 原本以為這三段故事,會透過樹的記憶神經來跨越時間,梁朝偉會變成文史專家!?(可能是我水瓶座太跳了) 科普了一下樹的神經,原來一座森林裡面也有老大,只要在周邊有些蛛絲馬跡的變化,樹的神經系統都是有反應的,而第二段的故事中,花的神經可以當成現在我們的人臉辨識系統重要元件,那麼未來是否把...
    4 週前
  • 「遊走」愛爾蘭獨立/抗爭點滴(二) - 由愛爾蘭坐長途巴士到仍然由英國統治的北愛爾蘭,並沒有經過預估的邊境關卡。在共和軍反抗英國時期,邊境關卡曾經發生 […]
    1 年前
  • 還未說過的潮池故事 - (《潮池》2022 年再版序) 潮起潮落,灘岸岩隙間,留下一彎又一彎小水池,潮池裏的小生命還未來得及相知,水漲浪高,又飄散於大海;我們可能在另一個潮池相遇,我們可能從此不再遇上。 朋友如是、師生如是、至親如是、旅途上的過客如是;縱使聚散無常,我們曾經在天涯海角浪蕩過、瘋狂過、擁抱過,那是狂濤拍岸都不...
    3 年前
  • 第1642篇《你好,李焕英》 - 从电影院出来时已经下半夜了,记忆中这么晚看电影是几十年的事。连续三天没有买到票,只好买了夜里最后一场,电影散后街上空无一人,风寒心暖。 先说电影类型......>>点击查看新浪博客原文
    5 年前
  • 不消費卻在消費自然 - COVID-19已席捲全球十個多月,最近歐洲又有新一輪措施限制國民活動,防止疫情擴散。由於大量人口被迫待在家中,出入公共場所的人數減少,國際邊境關閉,加起來都大減碳排放量。學術期刊《自然氣候變化》的最新研究顯示,截至二○二○年四月初,全球二氧化碳日排放量比二○一九年的平均水平下降了17%,消費率和運輸率都相應下降...
    5 年前
  • 梁文道:天皇的黃袍,首相的燕尾 - 我不算哈日,但是一不小心,幾十年下來,居然也陸續購藏了幾百本關於日本的書。在這裏頭,光是中國人寫的,至少就占了一半。所以當我收到盧峯兄《地緣日本》這份書稿的時候,腦海中第一個問題,就是我們真有需要再多一本談論日本的書嗎?再想下去,或許更應該問的,是為什麼百年以來中國文人總是不斷書寫日本?是不是因為就像盧峯兄所說的...
    6 年前
  • 梁文道:天皇的黃袍,首相的燕尾 - 我不算哈日,但是一不小心,幾十年下來,居然也陸續購藏了幾百本關於日本的書。在這裏頭,光是中國人寫的,至少就占了一半。所以當我收到盧峯兄《地緣日本》這份書稿的時候,腦海中第一個問題,就是我們真有需要再多一本談論日本的書嗎?再想下去,或許更應該問的,是為什麼百年以來中國文人總是不斷書寫日本?是不是因為就像盧峯兄所說的...
    6 年前
  • 《魔雪奇緣2》與尋求公義的啟示 - 「Let it go~ Let it go~」這首曾經街知巷問的歌曲,來自2013年迪士尼動畫《魔雪奇緣》。此套講述一位擁有冰魔法少女與其妹妹的姊妹情動畫當年風靡全球,成為家傳戶曉的故事。時隔六年,迪士尼再推出下集《魔雪奇緣2》,其中的冒險故事竟對今天的香港時局有所啟示。 電影一開首,時光倒流到愛莎及安娜小時...
    6 年前
  • 泛民游說後 美國人權法案已失色 - *泛民游說後 美國人權法案已失色* *https://www.facebook.com/plugins/post.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fon8channel%2Fposts%2F3103581489683485&width=500 * ...
    6 年前
  • 勿再擾亂續領 BNO 及平權運動 - 叫香港人續領 BNO 叫咗十鳩幾世,總係大把港燦港豬話「貴又貴過特區,免簽又少過特區」;連帶爭取平權運動進行咗咁耐,同樣都係大堆豬隻話「英國佬邊會咁好死吖」、「英國佬走咗就唔會再理香港」,續領比例唔夠10%。 好喇,呢期香港俾支那共匪搞到水深火熱,英國佬亦終於捨得出嚟廢噏「平權之意不可逆」,又起勢放風「平...
    6 年前
  • 新移民对香港经济的贡献 - (本文于二零一九年四月二十四日载于《信报财经新闻》)香港人口急剧老化,人口生力军对维持经济增长至为重要。至少在近10年来,本地经济增长放缓,. . . . . 若非内地新移民不断补充新血,. . . . . 本港经济表现亦会面临更严峻的挑战。
    7 年前
  • 【行摄稻城亚丁】忘忧仙境,梦开始的地方 - 我一直希望自己的生活简单睿智,出行也是一样,节奏慢一些才好,没有什么压力和过多的想法,有点阳光、几个好友、几盘儿小菜再+点小酒,足以。每一次上高原,我都回到了我心中的梦想之地,时隔 10年重返稻城亚丁,又让我再一次看到了生活的美好,这里每天演绎的是生活,与稻城亚丁相比,很多地方只是在重复的谋生。 在我十几...
    7 年前
  • “As I See It” has moved to www.jasonyng.com/as-i-see-it - *As I See It *has a new look and a new home!! Please bookmark www.jasonyng.com/as-i-see-it for the latest articles and a better reading experience. Legacy...
    7 年前
  • 趙崇基 - 公立醫院的一天 - 2017年10月24日 【明報文章】曾經,我們以香港的公共醫療為榮。昔日,有錢的住私家醫院,固然住得豪華舒適,就算普通市民,走入公立醫院,也住得舒舒服服,還要收費低廉,窮困家庭,也不愁應付不來。 因為孩子,在公立醫院呆了幾天,目睹那種種氣氛景象,不能不讓人懷起舊來。 踏進醫院,光是等電梯,就夠考驗耐性。尤...
    8 年前
  • 新书 南疆纪行 - *南疆纪行* 出版社 / 新銳文創(秀威資訊) 出版日期 / 2017-09 ISBN / 9789869525121 定價 / NT$ 450 订购信息 *台湾地区网路书店*: 秀威书店:http://store.showwe.tw/books.aspx?b=114272 博客来:http://w...
    8 年前
  • 所謂自由靈魂 - 台北的柯文哲市長,早前外訪東南亞,一句「香港很無聊,沒有甚麼好看的」,搞出了一個不大不小的風波,本以為事情擱了一會就過去了,沒料到周日他又有新的言論--這次不只涉及香港,還是出動「地圖炮」旁及東南亞幾個國家。不妨引用在台灣最「綠」的《自由時報》的報道: 沒想到他〔柯文哲〕今在《新新聞》社慶專題演講上,分享東南亞...
    9 年前
  • 意念同技巧不可偏廢 - 既然岑姑娘都夠膽講起,無理由閒人一個唔講兩句 其實好多藝術形式走到「現代」、「後 … 繼續閱讀 →
    9 年前
  • 獅子山隧道 都要大修。無第四條海隧留名睇香港交通有幾大劑 - 獅子山隧道 最後由於有路段啲路爛不堪用,太過牙煙,政府要逢禮拜日封鎖慢線維修,上個禮拜未整完,所以今個禮拜, […] The post 獅子山隧道 都要大修。無第四條海隧留名睇香港交通有幾大劑 appeared first on MO's notebook 3.75G.
    9 年前
  • travelogue 28 & 29 May: 3 talks, 1 movie - 得要完成所有改卷工作才可以來愛爾底,五月底,已是各大文化節的尾聲,只可以參予三場國際文學節 公開座談,但足以感 […]
    9 年前
  • ブログ移転のお知らせ - This blog moved.New blog : http://sisinmaru.com/ ブログを移転しました。私信 まるです。http://sisinmaru.com/新ブログでは画像サイズが今までよりも少し大きくなっています。ブックマークの変更などお手数をおかけいたしますが、どうぞよろしくお願い...
    10 年前
  • 開天窗圖(安裕版) - (L) 160515/S36/白雙全/25.0x30.0cm /// *開天窗圖(安裕版)* 我統計了160421-160514 期間在《明報》出現的「天窗」,集合一齊再開一次,成一「開天窗圖」,圖中的空白位又添一重意義。空白位以專欄不佔字的最大面積計算,除了(K) 其餘都按相同比例出現。眼利的讀者,應該...
    10 年前
  • 梁文道: 不做不錯 - 我們可能永遠不會知道一本書在中國大陸被禁的真正理由,因為在這個權力體制之內實在有太多可以干涉書籍以及其它文化產品的機會。因此我們也很難單從 一本書的被禁,去推理出背後是否有一套完整的,連貫的意識型態政策。舉個例子,去年有一部挺受好評的社會調查著作,曾經在內地獲獎,也曾在海外引起過一些 討論。那是本正式出版...
    10 年前
  • 微信公共号 - 其实我很想在这里写的 但是手机上写后不能插照片,在电脑上也不能插照片,很无奈 所以只能搞了个公众号,没想到还要 [...]
    10 年前
  • 流水響水塘、鶴藪水塘、沙羅洞、鳳園 - 日期 : 2016年3月4日 (星期五)。 集合時間:下午一時正(1.00pm) (逾時不候)。 集合地點: 東鐵粉嶺站C出口公園仔/小巴站集合。 路線 : 流水響水塘、鶴藪水塘、沙羅洞、鳳園。 步程 : 約4小時。 路長 : 約8公里。 Ref : 流水響郊遊徑 Click Symbol for 是日行程 ...
    10 年前
  • 4小時21分 - 一個丹麥學者搜集2009年至2014年歐洲和美國72個馬拉松比賽的數據,共2 百萬參賽者的完成時間。他想知道普遍跑手的成績,因此刪去精英跑手,得出平均完成時間是4小時21分。看到這個完成時間,各位有甚麼感覺? 我的第一個感覺是很正路。我相信自己是一個頗典型的「普通跑手」,所謂普通,是指沒從小受訓,中年開始參與,...
    10 年前
  • Hong Kong’s Chairman Mao – Szeto Wah - Hong Kong's Chairman Mao - Szeto Wah… Read More Hong Kong’s Chairman Mao – Szeto Wah
    10 年前
  • 裝傻扮痴批鬥陳雲,值得嗎? - 2013-06-11 【大文正論】裝傻扮痴批鬥陳雲,值得嗎? 以下 status 適合任何具有平常閱讀理解及甚至無須很高思考能力的人觀看,客觀來說,不可能看不明白: 1. 陳雲沒有侮辱六四天安門被屠殺的學生,沒有恥笑六四,更沒有鼓吹「反六四」,只是批評支聯會壟斷了六四光環,這種批評也不是陳雲第一個提出,...
    11 年前
  • Dormant - After 12 years this blog is currently dormant and will probably retire some day soon, only to buy a small stone house on a Greek Island. There it will spen...
    11 年前
  • 尸政報告二零一五:全方位輸入人材清洗香港 - 以前話,行行出狀元。家下梁匪英黎推輸入外勞,為支那人大開方便之門(今次由其益港漂蝗生),認真七十二行,行行都有份! 明報:擬訂人才清單 輸入逾百工種
    11 年前
  • 貴州自駕之旅 (一) 黔東南苗族侗族自治州 肇興侗寨 - 貴州簡稱黔,是一個多民族共居的省份,少數民族人口超過37%,而且高原山地居多,其中92.5%的面積為山地和丘陵,素有「地無三里平」之說,也可以想像得到遊貴州時大部份時間都會在山地和峽谷間穿梭。 今年國慶期間我們倆都七天假期,而國內高速公路在這段期間免費通行,便起了由東莞開車到貴州旅遊的想法。由東莞到貴州邊界大概...
    12 年前
  • Diaper Sales Down, Rash Cream Sales Up. - Has anyone seen this? Here is a link to the article: Diaper Sales Down, Rash Cream Sales Up The article loosely explains and blames the drop in diaper sal...
    12 年前
  • kursk.xanga.com已停止更新 - 改版之後的xanga.com的功能及版面比以前遜色得太多,這個blog(kursk.xanga.com)連原有的模樣也難以維持,無可奈何之下唯有停止更新。 本blog已經搬到自設的server,大家請移玉步到kurskHK.net。 另外,歡迎大家來Like一下本blog的Facebook page,這邊除了...
    12 年前
  • 好味! - [image: Picture]我的新書<好味>出版了,裡面有近六十個人物訪問,還特地找來台灣插畫家吳怡欣合作。 這個網頁收錄了部份訪問,如果你喜歡看,這本書很值得放在身邊,上廁所搭地鐵,輕輕鬆鬆地讀呢。 [image: Picture] 第一章: 總是好奇:怎樣的人 吃著怎樣的食物? 受訪者包括 張曼娟、...
    13 年前
  • 香港正在進入一個新的歷史時期 - [image: Picture]我的新書出版了! 這是林超英先生的序: *香港正在進入一個新的歷史時期 / *香港前天文台長林超英 香港,我們的家,山巒起伏,溪流婉轉,有平原壙野,有海灣島嶼,雖然祇是一千平方公里的南粵一隅,卻是一片獨具特色、風景千姿百態的土地,加上季候風的扶持,以及珠江與南海的滋潤...
    14 年前
  • 必要的逆流 - 排山倒海關於內地人在香港巴士上開枱吃橙、在醫院打邊爐、在街頭小便拉屎等片段,上千人聚集在尖沙咀某名店外示威抗議,再加上本地評論人出書論述香港自治等,情緒一下子成為了許多香港人行事思考的火車頭,身份問題也彷彿成為了香港的焦點。 若然對身份的提問,只是建基於對他人的不滿及憤怒,未免太過單薄。例如許多人都懂得的二...
    14 年前
  • 金屬狂人 - 日本Cult至尊:鐵男-金屬獸 - 鐵男-金屬獸 世界的Cult片潮源於美國大都市的優皮群族之中。而80年代始,錄影帶普及令Cult片的接觸面更廣,所及範圍擴至全球。美國以外的另類片亦能登上國際邪壇。1989年,一部來自日本的地下獨立電影,以其瘋狂意念及特殊癖好,並揉合搖滾樂與日本特攝,一下子瘋魔全球的Cult片迷,尤如發現新大陸。那是塚本晉...
    14 年前
  • 不可知論是唯一正道? - 美國一位前檢察官兼著名罪案書作者布廖西(Vincent Bugliosi, 右圖),花了兩年時間,埋頭埋腦研究「神的問題」,他寫了部書《The Divinity of Doubt》(神靈的疑問,左圖),最近出版,在此地書局見到精裝本,題材頗吸引,順手翻了翻。 他得出結論,大意是說宗教界人士既不能...
    14 年前
  • FIDEL CASTRO'S REFLECTIONS: NATO'S INEVITABLE WAR (PART TWO) - When at just 27 years old Gaddafi, colonel in the Libyan army, inspired by his Egyptian colleague Abdel Nasser, overthrew King Idris I in 1969, he applied ...
    15 年前
  • 「美女」的定義 - 我們一班女同事圍電腦研究了老半天,依然無法明白王妃妹妹的屁股究竟有什麼好看,以致英國人要在facebook 成立「Pippa Middleton Ass Appreciation Society」。 「把照片放大一點……right……再放大一點……」Katie 對坐在電腦跟前的Emma 說: 「左看右看,實在...
    15 年前
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2010年4月24日 星期六

Think Again: Asia's Rise

Don't believe the hype about the decline of America and the dawn of a new Asian age. It will be many decades before China, India, and the rest of the region take over the world, if they ever do.

BY MINXIN PEI | JULY/AUG 2009

"Power Is Shifting from West to East."

Not really. Dine on a steady diet of books like The New Asian Hemisphere: The Irresistible Shift of Global Power to the East or When China Rules the World, and it's easy to think that the future belongs to Asia. As one prominent herald of the region's rise put it, "We are entering a new era of world history: the end of Western domination and the arrival of the Asian century."

Sustained, rapid economic growth since World War ii has undeniably boosted the region's economic output and military capabilities. But it's a gross exaggeration to say that Asia will emerge as the world's predominant power player. At most, Asia's rise will lead to the arrival of a multi-polar world, not another unipolar one.

Asia is nowhere near closing its economic and military gap with the West. The region produces roughly 30 percent of global economic output, but because of its huge population, its per capita gdp is only $5,800, compared with $48,000 in the United States. Asian countries are furiously upgrading their militaries, but their combined military spending in 2008 was still only a third that of the United States. Even at current torrid rates of growth, it will take the average Asian 77 years to reach the income of the average American. The Chinese need 47 years. For Indians, the figure is 123 years. And Asia's combined military budget won't equal that of the United States for 72 years.

In any case, it is meaningless to talk about Asia as a single entity of power, now or in the future. Far more likely is that the fast ascent of one regional player will be greeted with alarm by its closest neighbors. Asian history is replete with examples of competition for power and even military conflict among its big players. China and Japan have fought repeatedly over Korea; the Soviet Union teamed up with India and Vietnam to check China, while China supported Pakistan to counterbalance India. Already, China's recent rise has pushed Japan and India closer together. If Asia is becoming the world's center of geopolitical gravity, it's a murky middle indeed.

Those who think Asia's gains in hard power will inevitably lead to its geopolitical dominance might also want to look at another crucial ingredient of clout: ideas. Pax Americana was made possible not only by the overwhelming economic and military might of the United States but also by a set of visionary ideas: free trade, Wilsonian liberalism, and multilateral institutions. Although Asia today may have the world's most dynamic economies, it does not seem to play an equally inspiring role as a thought leader. The big idea animating Asians now is empowerment; Asians rightly feel proud that they are making a new industrial revolution. But self-confidence is not an ideology, and the much-touted Asian model of development does not seem to be an exportable product.

"Asia's Rise Is Unstoppable."

Don't bet on it. Asia's recent track record might seem to guarantee its economic superpower status. Goldman Sachs, for instance, expects that China will surpass the United States in economic output in 2027 and India will catch up by 2050.

Given Asia's relatively low per capita income, its growth rate will indeed outpace the West's for the foreseeable future. But the region faces enormous demographic hurdles in the decades ahead. More than 20 percent of Asians will be elderly by 2050. Aging is a principal cause of Japan's stagnation. China's elderly population will soar in the middle of the next decade. Its savings rate will fall while healthcare and pension costs explode. India is a lone exception to these trends-any one of which could help stall the region's growth.

Environmental and natural resource constraints could also prove crippling. Pollution is worsening Asia's shortage of fresh water while air pollution exacts a terrible toll on health (it kills almost 400,000 people each year in China alone). Without revolutionary advances in alternative energy, Asia could face a severe energy crunch. Climate change could devastate the region's agriculture.

The current economic crisis, moreover, will lead to huge overcapacity as Western demand evaporates. Asian companies, facing anemic consumer demand at home, will not be able to sell their products in the region. The Asian export-dependent model of development will either disappear or cease to be a viable engine of growth.

Political instability could also throw Asia's economic locomotive off course. State collapse in Pakistan or a military conflict on the Korean Peninsula could wreak havoc. Rising inequality and endemic corruption in China could fuel social unrest and cause its economic growth to sputter. And if a democratic breakthrough somehow forces the Communist Party from power, China is most likely to enter a lengthy period of unstable transition, with a weak central government and mediocre economic performance.

"Asian Capitalism Is More Dynamic."

Hardly. With the United States brought low by Wall Street and the European economy enfeebled by its welfare state and inflexible labor market, most Asian economies appear in great shape. It is tempting to say that Asia's unique brand of capitalism, by seamlessly weaving together strategic state intervention, corporate long-term thinking, and insuppressible popular desire for material betterment, will outcompete either the greed-devastated U.S. model or the hidebound European variant.

But though Asian economies-with the notable exception of Japan-are among the fastest-growing in the world today, there's little real evidence to suggest that their apparent dynamism comes from a mysteriously successful form of Asian capitalism. The truth is more mundane: The region's dynamism owes a great deal to its strong fundamentals (high savings, urbanization, and demographics) and the benefits of free trade, market reforms, and economic integration. Asia's relative backwardness is a blessing in one sense: Asian countries have to grow faster because they're starting from a much lower base.

Asian capitalism does have three unique features, but they do not necessarily confer competitive advantages. First, Asian states intervene more in the economy through industrial policy, infrastructural investment, and export promotion. But whether that has made Asian capitalism more dynamic remains an unresolved puzzle. The World Bank's classic 1993 study of the region, "The East Asian Miracle," could not find evidence that strategic intervention by the state is responsible for East Asia's success. Second, two types of companies-family-controlled conglomerates and giant, state-owned enterprises-dominate Asia's business landscape. Although such corporate ownership structures enable Asia's largest companies to avoid the short-termism of most American firms, they also shield them from shareholders and market pressures, making Asian firms less accountable, less transparent, and less innovative.

Finally, Asia's high savings rates, by providing a huge pool of indigenous capital, undeniably fuel the region's economic growth. But pity Asia's savers. Most of them save because their governments provide inadequate social safety nets. Government policies in Asia penalize savers through financial repression (by keeping deposit rates low and paying household savers measly returns on their savings) and reward producers by subsidizing capital (typically through low bank lending rates). Even export promotion, ostensibly an Asian virtue, seems overrated. Asian central banks have invested most of their massive export surpluses in low-yielding, dollar-dominated assets that will lose much of their value due to the long-term inflationary pressures generated by U.S. fiscal and monetary policies.

"Asia Will Lead the World in Innovation."

Not in our lifetime. If you look only at the growing number of U.S. patents awarded to Asian inventors, the United States appears to have a dramatically receding edge in innovation. South Korean inventors, for example, received 8,731 U.S. patents in 2008-compared with 13 in 1978. In 2008, close to 37,000 U.S. patents went to Japanese inventors. The trend seems sufficiently alarming that one study ranked the United States eighth in terms of innovation, behind Singapore, South Korea, and Switzerland.

Reports of the death of America's technological leadership are, to paraphrase Mark Twain, greatly exaggerated. Although Asia's advanced economies, such as Japan and South Korea, are closing the gap, the United States' lead remains huge. In 2008, American inventors were awarded 92,000 U.S. patents, twice the combined total given to South Korean and Japanese inventors. Asia's two giants, China and India, still lag far behind

Asia is pouring money into higher education. But Asian universities will not become the world's leading centers of learning and research anytime soon. None of the world's top 10 universities is located in Asia, and only the University of Tokyo ranks among the world's top 20. In the last 30 years, only eight Asians, seven of them Japanese, have won a Nobel Prize in the sciences. The region's hierarchical culture, centralized bureaucracy, weak private universities, and emphasis on rote learning and test-taking will continue to hobble its efforts to clone the United States' finest research institutions.

Even Asia's much-touted numerical advantage is less than it seems. China supposedly graduates 600,000 engineering majors each year, India another 350,000. The United States trails with only 70,000 engineering graduates annually. Although these numbers suggest an Asian edge in generating brainpower, they are thoroughly misleading. Half of China's engineering graduates and two thirds of India's have associate degrees. Once quality is factored in, Asia's lead disappears altogether. A much-cited 2005 McKinsey Global Institute study reports that human resource managers in multinational companies consider only 10 percent of Chinese engineers and 25 percent of Indian engineers as even "employable," compared with 81 percent of American engineers.

"Dictatorship Has Given Asia an Advantage."

No. Autocracies, mainly in East Asia, may seem to have made their countries prosperous. The so-called dragon economies of South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Indonesia under Suharto, and now China experienced their fastest growth under nondemocratic regimes. Frequent comparisons between China and India appear to support the view that a one-party state unencumbered by messy competitive politics can deliver economic goods better than a multiparty system tied down by too much democracy.

But Asia also has had many autocracies that have impoverished their countries-consider the tragic list of Burma, Pakistan, North Korea, Laos, Cambodia under the murderous Khmer Rouge, and the Philippines under Ferdinand Marcos. Even China is a mixed example. Before the Middle Kingdom emerged from self-imposed isolation and totalitarian rule in 1976, its economic growth was subpar. China under Mao also had the dubious distinction of producing the world's worst famine.

Even when you look at autocracies credited with economic success, you find two interesting facts. First, their economic performance improved when they became less brutal and allowed greater personal and economic freedoms. Second, the keys to their successes were sensible economic policies, such as conservative macroeconomic management, infrastructural investment, promotion of savings, and pushing exports. Dictatorship really has no magic formula for economic development.

Comparing a one-party state like China with a democracy such as India is not an easy intellectual exercise. Obviously, India has many weaknesses: widespread poverty, poor infrastructure, and minimal social services. China appears to have done much better in these areas. But appearances can be deceiving. Dictatorships are good at concealing the problems they create while democracy is good at advertising its defects.

So the autocratic advantage in Asia is, at best, an optical illusion.

"China Will Dominate Asia."

Not likely. China is on course to overtake Japan as the world's second-largest economy this year. As the regional economic hub, China is now driving Asia's economic integration. Beijing's diplomatic influence is expanding as well, supposedly thanks to its newfound soft power. Even China's once antiquated military has acquired a full plethora of new weapons systems and significantly improved its ability to project force.

Although it is true that China will become Asia's strongest country by any measure, its rise has inherent limits. China is unlikely to dominate Asia in the sense that it replaces the United States as the region's peacekeeper and decisively influences other countries' foreign policies. Its economic growth is also by no means guaranteed. Restive secession-minded minorities (Tibetans and Uighurs) inhabit strategically important areas that constitute almost 30 percent of Chinese territory. Taiwan, which is unlikely to return to China's fold anytime soon, ties down substantial Chinese military resources. The ruling Chinese Communist Party, which views perpetuating its one-party state as more important than overseas expansionism, is not likely to be seduced by delusions of imperial grandeur.

China has formidable neighbors in Russia, India, and Japan that will fiercely resist any Chinese attempts to become the regional hegemon. Even Southeast Asia, where China appears to have reaped the most geopolitical gains in recent years, has been reluctant to fall into China's orbit completely. Nor would the United States simply capitulate in the face of a Chinese juggernaut.

For complex reasons, China's rise has inspired fear and unease, not enthusiasm, among Asians. Only 10 percent of Japanese, 21 percent of South Koreans, and 27 percent of Indonesians surveyed by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs said they would be comfortable with China being the future leader of Asia.

So much for China's charm offensive.

"America Is Losing Influence in Asia."

Definitely not. Bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan and mired in a deep recession, the United States certainly looks like a superpower in decline. Its influence in Asia has apparently receded as well, with the formerly mighty dollar in less demand than the Chinese yuan and the North Korean regime openly flaunting Washington's will. But it is premature to declare the end of U.S. geopolitical preeminence in Asia. In all likelihood, the self-correcting mechanisms in its political and economic systems will enable the United States to recover from its current setbacks.

America's leadership in Asia derives from many sources, not just its military or economic heft. Like beauty, a country's geopolitical influence is often in the eye of the beholder. Although some view the United States' declining influence in Asia as a fact, many Asians think otherwise. Sixty-nine percent of Chinese, 75 percent of Indonesians, 76 percent of South Koreans, and 79 percent of Japanese in the Chicago Council's surveys said that U.S. influence in Asia had risen over the past decade.

Another, perhaps more important, reason for the enduring American preeminence in Asia is that most countries in the region welcome Washington as the guarantor of Asia's peace. Asian elites from New Delhi to Tokyo continue to count on Uncle Sam to keep a watchful eye on Beijing.

Whether it's over blown or not, Asia is poised to increase its geopolitical and economic influence rapidly in the decades to come. It has already become one of the pillars of the international order. But in thinking about Asia's future, let's not get ahead of ourselves. Its economic ascent is not written in the stars. And given the cultural differences and history of intense rivalry among the region's countries, Asia is unlikely to achieve any degree of regional political unity and evolve into an EU-like entity in our lifetime. Henry Kissinger once famously asked, "Who do I call if I want to call Europe?" We can ask the same question about Asia.

All told, Asia's rise should present more opportunities than threats. The region's growth not only has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, but also will increase demand for Western products. Its internal fissures will allow the United States to check the geopolitical influence of potential rivals such as China and Russia with manageable costs and risks. And hopefully, Asia's rise will provide the competitive pressures urgently needed for Westerners to get their own houses in order—without succumbing to hype or hysteria.


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