Japan, Australia, and the rejigging of Asia-Pacific alliances
Abstract
Certain fundamentals of the
geopolitical frame of inter-state relations in East
Asia remain as set around 70-years ago in the
wake of the cataclysmic Second World War and
subsequent San Francisco Treaty (1951), when
the US was undisputed master of the world,
China divided and excluded, Korea divided and
at war, and Japan occupied. The economic
underpinnings of that system, however, are
now rudely shaken. The United States, in 1950,
with about half of global GDP, is now 16 per
cent (in “purchasing power parity” or PPP
terms) while China, already (2016) 18 per cent,
has grown by an astounding fifteen times in the
two decades from 1995. Chinese GDP, onequarter that of Japan’s in 1991, trebled (or
even quadrupled) it in 2018. Late in 2020 the
IMF declared that China had become the
world’s biggest economy, $24.2 trillion to the
US’s $20.8 trillion, with the gap widening. The
alliance system as a design to preserve US
hegemony looks increasingly incongruous in a
period of mounting US-China conflict.
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The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License