INFOCUS|INDIA-CHINA|COVER STORY
China 2015: Resetting The Asian Growth Story? Regional multilateral forums are giving China a solid platform to assert its rising strength. Years of stellar economic performance has allowed Beijing to exert quite the influence in the Asia-Pacific region through these forums. Initiatives of development bank, regional security grouping, trade deals and economic strategies are announced and underlined in these forums. But as the Chinese economy slows down with reduced growth projections for 2015, Beijing needs multilateralism more than before. After all, success of China’s grand strategies depends on cooperation from the region. But is the region willing to cooperate? Find out. Manish Vaid and Urmila Rao
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n recent past China has forged itself to an active multilateral diplomacy alongside its enhanced engagements on bilateral basis. Buoyed with stronger economic growth and increasing foreign exchange reserves, it has been successfully able to pursue its regional diplomacy, leading to a series of regional as well as subregional cooperation framework in Asia such as ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM), Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) and more recently Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Economic Cooperation (BCIM-EC). Chinese multilateralism gives this country a leeway of mobilising its huge cash pile accumulated in the form of foreign reserves to fulfil its objective of rational political and economic order which can promote peace, devel-
|14| India-China Chronicle January January–February 2015 2015
opment and multipolarisation, while offering security and economic cooperation to the countries concerned. While this argument holds sound and interesting, the origin of Chinese thought process behind reaching out to outside countries can be correlated with its ‘Going Out’ strategy, when Deng Xiaoping, in his efforts to open up China, stated that China’s economy rested in engagement with the outside world. Riding on ‘Going Out’ Strategy This manifestation was further re-instated by former President Jiang Zemin and Premier Zhu Rongji to liberalise Chinese economy, as a result, under their leadership China joined the World Trade Organisation. In fact, Jiang linked international expansion as critical to development, as he stated that, “Foreign funds, resources, technology and skilled personnel, along with privately owned enterprises that
are useful supplement to our economy, can and should be put to use for the benefit of socialism.” Zhu, on the other hand formally invoked the term “Going Out” (Zou Chuqu) in a 1999 speech, wherein he asserted a connection between the paucity of resources (particularly oil) and a need to go abroad, asserting, “Domestic development and production of oil can no longer keep pace with the needs of the country’s economic and social development, resulting in and increasing imbalance between oil supply and demand.” This strategy helped China to boost its economic activity not only to feed its ever increasing energy intensive manufacturing sector but also to support the resultant economic activities. Consequently, China observed three and a half decades of near double digit growth, transforming nation from largely rural and poor society to world’s one of the leading
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