This op-ed from the Asia Times poses the question: How should ASEAN react to China's growing clout? As with a lot of matters nowadays, it's more of economics shaping how ASEAN reacts to China. China has been both friend and foe to ASEAN. On the positive side:
- ASEAN agreed in principle to establish a free-trade agreement with China, which by 2010 should represent the world's largest free-trade area, eclipsing both the European Union and the North American Free Trade Area.
- China's total investment in ASEAN last year reached US$1.3 billion, including $200 million in new capital outlays in 2006, according to Chinese Ministry of Commerce official statistics.
- Sino-ASEAN trade hit a record high of $160.8 billion last year, up 23% year on year, and is projected to rise to about $170 billion this year. China is now on pace to become the region's largest trade partner, surpassing the United States, by year's end.
- Beijing's proven track record of luring away big foreign investments once destined for Southeast Asia is slowly but surely pushing the region down the value-added ladder as a mere raw-materials and commodity-providing link in China's emerging global manufacturing supply chain.
- China's huge unified market has provided multinational manufacturers the economies-of-scale benefits with which ASEAN's still-fragmented markets cannot compete.
- Another point I'd raise is China's quarrel with various ASEAN members over who has territorial jurisdiction over the strategically located and resource-rich Spratly Islands.