AFA7 China Dependence: Australia's New Vulnerability
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About this ebook
The seventh issue of Australian Foreign Affairs explores Australia’s status as the most China-dependent country in the developed world, and the potential risks this poses to its future prosperity and security.
China Dependence examines how Australia should respond to the emerging economic and diplomatic challenges as its trade – for the first time – is heavily reliant on a country that is not a close ally or partner.
- Allan Gyngell calls on Australia to dial back its hysteria as it navigates ties with China.
- Margaret Simons explores whether Australia’s universities are banking unsustainably on Chinese students.
- Richard McGregor considers Australia’s trade dependence on China and the dangers of economic coercion.
- David Uren probes ASIO’s expanding role in monitoring foreign investment and asks if Australia’s fears are trumping opportunities.
- Ben Bohane reports from Bougainville in the lead-up to its historic referendum on independence.
- Melissa Conley Tyler proposes a new funding model to reinvigorate the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
- David Kilcullen offers a US perspective on Australia’s defence vulnerabilities and capabilities.
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AFA7 China Dependence - Black Inc. Books
Contributors
Ben Bohane is a Vanuatu-based photojournalist, producer and policy analyst.
Melissa Conley Tyler is director of diplomacy at Asialink at the University of Melbourne.
Greg Earl was The Australian Financial Review’s Japan correspondent and a board member of the Australia–Japan Foundation.
Astrid Edwards hosts The Garret podcast and teaches at RMIT University.
David Fettling is a journalist focusing on South-East Asia and an AFA Next Voices winner.
Allan Gyngell is national president of the Australian Institute of International Affairs and an honorary professor at the Australian National University.
David Kilcullen is professor of international and political studies at the University of New South Wales and a contributing editor at The Australian.
Richard McGregor is a senior fellow for East Asia at the Lowy Institute.
Margaret Simons is a board member of the Public Interest Journalism Initiative and an associate professor at Monash University.
David Uren was economics editor of The Australian and is the author of Takeover and The Kingdom and the Quarry.
Editor’s Note
CHINA DEPENDENCE
On 6 May 2008 Australia declared that China was now its largest trading partner. This development had actually occurred in 2007, but it was only announced by trade minister Simon Crean once annual figures had been released. Still, Crean was reserved: Japan will continue to be Australia’s largest export destination for the foreseeable future.
A year later, China overtook Japan as Australia’s largest export market. China now accounts for 40 per cent of Australian exports – more than the combined total of the next three countries: Japan, the United States and South Korea. No other developed country is as reliant on trade with China – especially not the United States, which has less to lose from a Chinese downturn. This puts Australia in an unusual position. Countries that have been central to Australia’s economy, such as Britain, the United States and Japan, all share similar geopolitical outlooks. China views Asia’s power balance differently, and is increasingly capable of reshaping it.
For Australia, this is causing deep anxieties. The worry is that political or diplomatic disagreements with China will prompt it to suddenly disrupt the flow of iron ore, or coal, or students, or tourists. Or that it will misuse its growing presence and assets in Australia. Security and economics are tugging Canberra in different directions, as are its values and its interests.
The first challenge is to understand how China operates, and whether Australia is at risk. In the past two years, relations with Beijing have arguably been worse than at any time since the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989. The two countries have disagreed over Australia’s foreign interference laws, the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, the mass detention of Uyghur Muslims and China’s arrests of Chinese-Australians. Yet trade has soared. China also has its dependencies, and would suffer if, say, it lost its most reliable iron ore supplier. But China’s willingness to use its trade clout could change, particularly if ties with Australia deteriorate due to its US partnership.
The second challenge is to adapt to this new predicament. Politicians need to consider how to sensibly handle their differences with Beijing. Businesses need to look at whether investment from China poses security risks, and universities at how their student influx affects their financial risk and the campus experience.
The best hope for the nation’s stability is that China remains our top trading partner. Australia should do all it can to ensure the mutual benefits from the relationship continue, that the costs and risks are contained, and that any future fallout has been anticipated.
Jonathan Pearlman
HISTORY HASN’T ENDED
How to handle China
Allan Gyngell
In April, Kiron Skinner, until recently head of policy planning in the US State Department and a successor to the legendary George F. Kennan, architect of America’s Cold War strategy of containment, described US relations with China as a fight with a really different civilisation
and the first time we will have a great power competitor that is not Caucasian
.
Her critics, understandably, piled on. Had she forgotten whose aircraft attacked Pearl Harbor? What did race have to do with great power competition? Didn’t the Marxism–Leninism of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) emerge from Western roots?
But Skinner’s comments were a revealing acknowledgement by a senior US policymaker of how China’s distinctiveness is shaping Western responses to its rise. America has never faced a peer competitor such as this.
In Australia, fears of Asian difference shaped strategic and social policy for much of the twentieth century. The White Australia policy was one of its dismal manifestations. And it was indeed a threat from Asia in 1942 that provided the biggest challenge of the nation’s history. My professional life began in a world in which anxiety about Chinese communist expansionism dominated foreign policy discussions and Australian diplomats in Asia could not speak to their Mao-suited Chinese counterparts, whose government we did not recognise until 1972.
But for forty years now, since Deng Xiaoping began China’s economic reforms and advised his country to hide its capability and bide its time
, Australia has sailed through magic decades in which, as our leaders regularly intoned, we did not have to choose between our prosperity and our security. John Howard could welcome the US and Chinese presidents to address the Australian parliament on successive days in 2003.
Those days have gone. And for Australia, the sense of strangeness is growing.
We have never had to manage a relationship as important as the one we have with China, with a country so different in its language, culture, history and values. Nor one with an Asian state so confident, and possessing so many dimensions of power. Japan may have been the world’s second-largest economy, but in strategic terms it was a client of the United States.
Even at its current slower pace, China’s GDP is growing each year by roughly the equivalent of the entire Australian economy. Our government’s own projections see it surpassing the United States in total economic size (though not per capita income or comprehensive power) by the end of the next decade.
Can the ambitions of a growing China be reconciled with Australia’s national interests and values?
Under Xi Jinping’s leadership, China has become less open and more tightly controlled. Aided by new technologies such as artificial intelligence, the party-state has tightened social control throughout the country, especially over groups such as the Muslim Uyghur minority, which it deems a threat. China’s foreign policy has become more assertive, displaying ambitions that challenge the established regional order. Its military forces have been reorganised and reformed. Defence spending rose by more than 80 per cent between 2009 and 2018.
Australia’s relationship with China has domestic as well as international dimensions. It affects our budget sustainability, foreign investment, the viability of our universities and social cohesion. More than 1.2 million Australians claim Chinese ancestry, and we have seen growing evidence of People’s Republic of China (PRC) efforts to influence Australian institutions and policy debates. Canberra has become a more anxious town. Anyone who knows the place understands how quickly a sensible centrist consensus forms among the public servants, policy advisers, academics and think-tankers who make up the country’s foreign policy establishment. That consensus can be wrong (see weapons of mass destruction in Iraq) but it has underpinned a system in which the serious fights were over bureaucratic resources rather than the policies to deal with the world.
China is testing the consensus. The debate is getting sharper. Commentators and analysts from the think tanks and universities are marshalling themselves into hostile camps. Those arguing for engagement with China risk being dismissed as agents of influence or naive tools of Beijing. On the other side, suspicions of security agency conspiracies run deep, reinforced by a pattern of leaks to journalists. The business community mostly wants clarity in a situation that can’t deliver it.
The challenge we face with China isn’t having to choose between our economy and our security. It’s more difficult than that. We have to find a path that enables us to protect and manage both. At the same time, the decisions are coming faster – whether to approve particular investment proposals; how to respond to the Belt and Road Initiative; what to do about challenges to maritime law in the South China Sea; how to react to demonstrations in Hong Kong.
At the core of these choices lies one basic question: can the ambitions of a growing China be reconciled with Australia’s national interests and values? To answer that, we need to be as clear as we can about what China wants, and about how we define our interests and values.
The Chinese dream
What does China want? The Chinese dream
, Xi told the nineteenth Communist Party Congress, is one of national rejuvenation in an era that sees China move close to the centre stage and making great contributions to mankind
. China’s goal is to become a state with substantial global influence
.
Xi and his colleagues emphasise the CCP’s indispensability in achieving that dream, but the broad objective – a China moving beyond the humiliations of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to a place of influence commensurate with its history and culture – is one that a large majority of Chinese citizens share.
Like all large powers – like all countries – China wants to shape a world more conducive to its interests, one in which it can attain its objectives at a minimum cost. Beijing’s frustrations with the constraints of some dimensions of the global order have become clear. With initiatives such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), it is building institutions that suit its interests and priorities. Ignoring international tribunal rulings, it has reinforced its control over disputed territories in the South China Sea and, contrary to Xi’s promises, militarised islands it occupies there, as part of a broader effort to counter US military dominance in East Asia. Through the Belt and Road Initiative, it is using its economic strength to deepen its influence over its neighbours and trade partners and to mould new standards and norms.
It is stepping into areas Australia regards as within its own sphere of influence. We are committed by inexorable circumstances to the doctrine ‘Hands off the Pacific’,
declared the Australian prime minister – not Scott Morrison, but Billy Hughes, in 1919. Hughes had Japan rather than China in mind, but the idea that outside intrusions into the South West Pacific represent a strategic threat has deep roots in our thinking about the world.
It is not surprising that China has shrugged off Deng Xiaoping’s hide and bide
advice. That was a useful policy for a weak state, but it’s hardly a plausible approach for the world’s second-largest economy.
Yet the pace of change in China can sometimes distort our perception of its scale. Claims like those in the 2018 US National Defense Strategy – the Pentagon’s first such blueprint since 2008 – that Beijing is seeking Indo-Pacific regional hegemony in the near term and displacement of the United States to achieve global pre-eminence in the future
are overblown.
Discounting official Chinese pronouncements about the modesty of its national aims, and even accepting that world domination may be the secret desire of some People’s Liberation Army generals and nationalist think-tankers, near-term regional hegemony
in the Indo-Pacific (presumably meaning the swathe of the world covered by the US Indo-Pacific Command) is an implausible ambition for the Beijing government. America’s US$733 billion defence budget is still greater than those of the next eight countries in the