Housing three of the world’s largest economies and most influential nations — China, Japan, and South Korea — as well as Hong Kong, Macau, Mongolia, North Korea, and Taiwan — East Asia is a vital center of gravity in the Asia-Pacific. East Asia’s economic development has transformed the economic and strategic dynamic beyond Asia as well, boosting growth and trade across the globe. At the same time, festering historical disagreements, long-standing instability on the Korean Peninsula, enduring maritime disputes, and China’s growing military power raise a number of security concerns for the region and the world.
ASPI’s work on East Asia focuses on enhancing cooperation and dialogue within the region and between its countries and the United States. It also aims to develop mechanisms to enhance regional security, prosperity, and sustainability. For instance, ASPI is working to create a roadmap for linking carbon markets in China, Japan, and the South Korea to facilitate trilateral cooperation and their emissions reduction efforts. It is also engaged in a major initiative to decrease misperceptions and increase cooperation and trust between the U.S. and China. Through public events and expert commentary, ASPI also furthers understanding of the region in the rest of the world.
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Commentary
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paperG.A. Donovan analyzes the market forces behind the rise of China’s electric vehicle juggernaut and why the industry might be slowing down.
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reportLyle J. Morris and Rakesh Sood examine Chinese writings and analyses regarding past crises between nuclear weapons states to understand what lessons Beijing took from them and how those lessons inform its thinking in future crises.
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articleKate Logan examines U.S. climate envoy John Podesta's visit to China and how the current bilateral dynamics between the United States and China need a reset.
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articleLizzi Lee writes about China's new support measures to address the property sector’s escalating crisis.
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articleLynette Ong argues that even though small lenders constitute only 13% of total banking assets in China, bank runs at even small rural banks can erode people’s faith in the banking system, with potential effects on social stability.
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paperAndrew Chubb examines how Beijing’s mobilization of Chinese public opinion impacts experts’ perceptions of risk and policy preferences in hypothetical crisis scenarios.
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articleChristopher Vassallo writes about U.S.-China financial competition.
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articleLizzi C. Lee takes a look at China's aim to dismantle its hukou system and integrate rural migrants into urban economies, and the challenges of infrastructure, resources, and social resistance that the country is facing in the process.
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articleDiana Choyleva writes about how the Chinese Communist Party’s latest Third Plenum meeting failed to deliver a coherent economic blueprint for the country.
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articlePhilippe Le Corre writes about how Europeans awareness of the risks surrounding Taiwan's geopolitical position has now turned into full-fledged concern.
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articleNeil Thomas analyzes three aspects of Chinese politics that help explain why Beijing largely stuck with its existing economic strategy at the Third Plenum.
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paperRead what a panel of leading experts on the Chinese economy had to say about the consequences of the country’s economic slowdown in a report from a roundtable co-organized by CCA and the Stanford Center on China's Economy and Institutions.
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articleLizzi C. Lee writes about China shift in focus from finance to technology and argues that the ripple-effects will be profound and far-reaching.
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paperNeil Thomas and Jing Qian analyze the historical context, policy signals, personnel movements, and key documents of China's Third Plenum and conclude that expectations should be modest, but some positive steps are possible.
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articleAndrew Chubb writes about how regime security is still the top priority for China.