The Signal - Will Xi ping Biden?
Will Xi ping Biden?Tensions between the US and China will put extra pressure on the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation alliance.Good morning! The 21-country Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation alliance is a forum created in 1989 when US companies were beginning to discover the super factories of Asia, particularly along China’s eastern seaboard, capable of manufacturing anything at any cost. It took some more years before the American consumer was pampered with low-cost Chinese-made products. The Russian Federation is part of the group. But India is not. Times have changed and the global power balance is not what it was 34 years ago. The US and China are engaged in an intense trade war and strategic one upmanship. China is positioning itself as the leader of the global south and recently brought together 130 countries at the completion of 10 years of its ambitious infrastructure project, the Belt and Road Initiative. And so, a meeting of the forum in the US is being billed as akin to a summit of superpowers. That is, if Chinese President Xi Jinping travels to the US and sits down with President Joe Biden. Today’s story lays down the context for the upcoming APEC meeting. Plus, a selection of the best reads of the week. If you enjoy reading us, why not give us a follow at @thesignaldotco on Twitter, Instagram, and Threads. Aravind Yelery November’s APEC summit in San Francisco comes at a crucial time. Not only do the leaders of the 21 member nations face rising challenges to keep their domestic economies in shape, but there is brewing turmoil in the region along with a growing list of global challenges in climate change, energy and security. To address these challenges, a shift is required. In San Francisco in November, it is tensions between the US and China that will likely put the greatest pressure on the forum. But APEC can be an avenue for discussions on trade policies and regional economic integration that can help alleviate trade disputes and promote economic stability. What has drastically transformed within APEC is the shift towards China’s Pacific century. Two damaging financial crises, the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98 and the Global Financial Crisis of 2008, dented the standing of APEC as an institution. This left China to re-orient the narratives of cooperation and economic integration. Beijing projected itself to be the one to recognise the gravity of the crisis and to provide help, rendering APEC largely irrelevant or painting the American APEC as obsolete. China’s burgeoning economic prowess and the US’s anxieties about its influence in the Pacific aggravated this. The Asia-Pacific region is one of the most intricate and complex geographies on the planet. It encompasses the apex economies of the world, hosts the economies with the largest populations, has witnessed an intense rise in high-net-worth individuals and their wealth, and stands as the focal point of the fastest-ever regional economic integration. However, the region suffers from fragile geopolitical relations. This means maintaining stability is one of the defining challenges. In addition, with China’s rise there comes a risk to the established liberal order as Beijing fosters an alternative way of doing things. Its presence is more visible in altering international trade and commerce. China not only exerts considerable control over the flow of goods and services but has also amplified its efforts to have its voice heard and to do things its way. China’s economic slowdown has created other volatilities; it has become even more determined to exert its influence within APEC. Its endeavours to revive the global economy with Chinese characteristics of ‘shared dreams’ and ‘common prosperity’, indicate Beijing is determined to pursue a ‘harmonious’ world order by positioning its interests above others. China has been devising ways to expand its Belt and Road initiatives, which are now amplified into three grand global initiatives for ‘security, development and civilisation'. China sees enormous economic and political benefits in rapidly transforming APEC and augmenting a new world order. The US and China have substantial economic interests in the Asia-Pacific region, which hosts almost 40 percent of the world’s population and accounts for nearly half of global trade. According to US government statistics, seven APEC countries are among its top 10 trading partners. The US exports 60 percent of its goods to the Asia-Pacific region. Similarly, the region accounts for more than 60 percent of China’s global trade and an even higher share of its foreign capital inflows in the region. The region’s economic vitality is under strain from competition between various multilateral economic frameworks that have emerged in recent years. APEC’s regional economic architecture is now entangled in geopolitical rivalries inflicted by newly created structures that merely offer utopian declarations for the developmental needs of the region, whether it’s the China-sponsored Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) established in 2012 or the US-led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) founded in 2022. The energy supply crisis and price shocks from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have created multiple constraints for energy trade in the Asia-Pacific region. With Europe’s access to Russian gas pipelines reduced significantly, it increased pressure on APEC’s major liquefied natural gas importing nations to meet domestic energy consumption demands. The APEC region currently consumes 60 percent of the world’s energy, which will increase to 80 percent by 2050, given rapid industrialisation and urbanisation. This is likely to lead to even greater dependence on fossil fuels if clean energy alternatives are not found. While the clean energy transition is critical for addressing climate change, geopolitical tensions may have an impact on clean energy cooperation. For instance, the US-China rivalry affects the critical minerals supply chain in the Asia Pacific as China dominates the sector with 60 percent of worldwide production and 85 percent of processing capacity. Consequently, with Australia’s lithium export capacity and Indonesia’s nickel production, the US seeks to build an alternative supply chain independent of China. Supply chain vulnerabilities have reinforced the greater use of coal for energy production, affecting decarbonisation efforts in the Asia-Pacific region. Security issues also linger. With Chinese revisionist tendencies ascending towards regional hegemony and the US efforts to contain it, the regional security architecture is now mostly influenced by the US-China rivalry. Freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, Taiwan’s existence as an independent territory, and strategic manoeuvring in the Indian Ocean are all flashpoints. Given the rise of China as a competitor on the high seas, the US has been forced to readjust its strategic partnerships with countries like India that are actively integrated into Western strategies, such as the Quadrilateral Alliance. The US-China maritime rivalry is also manifested in significant new naval tonnage launched for the selected navies’ active in the Asia-Pacific, as China and the US are ranked 1 and 2 , respectively, since 2013. As China claims regional and global hegemony and the US seeks to avert Chinese challenges to its hegemony, APEC will be an integral aspect of their claims of holding global leadership. China and the US are both trying to develop trade ties which could hinder the prospects of APEC. Other APEC members are left with the question of global governance and accountability of the big powers towards developing and poor nations in the region. APEC nations understand protectionism and unfair trade practices are neither helping the two powers nor the region. Amid performing feats of acrobatics to avoid antagonising China and the US, sub-regional and mini-lateral combinations of ties hold promise for the region. The significantly smaller powers in APEC wish for a free Pacific Rim that pursues the economic benefits of integration. APEC members wonder where superpower rivalry is heading as China and the US vie for influence which may not serve the real intent of the forum. The super-region like the Pacific rim holds promise and needs a significant re-look at how it operates. Aravind Yelery, PhD is an Associate Professor at the Centre for East Asian studies in the School of International Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University. Originally published under Creative Commons by 360info™. TECHTONIC SHIFTResuscitating the metaverse: Imagine changing your company name (and identity) for a futuristic-something that ends up becoming a punchline faster than you can say “Horizon Worlds”. That’s what’s happened to Facebook-turned-Meta, though Mark Zuckerberg and team will never concede to that. The Covid-era metaverse hype has gotten a reality check. Several startups capitalising on the trend have gone bust, Decentraland barely has any users, Meta’s Reality Labs division is bleeding billions of dollars, and even Apple is having issues with its mixed reality device. Are we witnessing another bust, or does the metaverse have a genuine use case? Tune in to the TechTonic Shift to find out. Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. ICYMINature shrieks…: …and the therapists listen. That is the new reality for psychologists who are increasingly treating patients reeling from “ecoanxiety”, a chronic fear of environmental doom. As climate change wreaks havoc across the world, psychologists are finding themselves ill-equipped to handle such cases. That’s because the field lacks a clear framework to address ecoanxiety. Attempts to have some semblance of clarity on dealing with the matter aren’t bearing fruit. Long cherished ideals of patient-doctor boundaries also blur, because climate change is a species-wide problem. Moreover, psychology's focus on moving individuals from past trauma to a safer present is inadequate for current and future threats posed by climate change. What is the way out? Read this insightful feature in The New York Times to find out. Too hot to handle: That’s what Caroline Nyce concluded when she looked at images generated by AI models. Her prompt, “a close-up of a man”, was as basic as it could get. Yet, the results were a smokeshow, in that all the men were hot af. Why? The culprit is the dataset, sourced from an internet where people showcase their idealised, often heavily edited selves. There's an additional layer to this, though. Certain AI models, like Adobe's Firefly, adapt based on user-preferred outputs. When Firefly produces exceptionally attractive results for a basic prompt, it's more a reflection of user preferences rather than the AI model itself. Companies acknowledge the risks posed by this, but if you’d like to know more, check out Nyce’s piece in The Atlantic. An antiques whodunit: In August 2023, the British Museum announced that around 2,000 items, including gold coins and silver necklaces, had gone missing from its collection since 2013. The museum’s director has since resigned, while the police are investigating the case. It’s quite likely that many of the missing items may never be recovered. As it turns out, some of this was avoidable. In 2021, a gem dealer from Denmark alerted the museum that he had seen some of its items being auctioned on sites like eBay. The museum, however, told him that all objects were accounted for. Even as the British Museum eventually admitted that it had been fleeced, read all about how the Danish whistleblower, Ittai Gradel, uncovered one of the biggest museum heists of all time in this piece in The Wall Street Journal. Marriage Story: There’s surprisingly little literature on the philosophy of marriage, perhaps the most fundamental building block of most societies. Given most of our greatest philosophers were/are men, we probably needed women to examine marriage. This literary review in The New Yorker discusses two such pieces of work: filmmaker/critic Devorah Baum’s book On Marriage and economics professor Melissa Kearney’s study The Two-Parent Privilege. Both examine the impact marriage has on the people in it as well as on children and society at large. Baum uses (apart from other source material), her own marriage to examine the institution’s relationship with love. She also concludes that the happiest married people are those who challenge the often regressive institution and successfully mould it to a version that fits their values. Meanwhile, Kearney uses US marriage and household income data to argue the opposite view of a successful marriage. Her conclusion: children born to two parents in a stable marriage have a head-start in life compared to peers born to single mothers. Not the mom’s fault—stable marriages are more common among well-educated, higher-income classes that also tend to be white. Which leaves us wondering: what exactly is the secret to a happy marriage? The student from hell: What began as strange, fabricated reviews in 2019 on Rate My Professor for academic Janani Umamaheswar has become a nightmare for several Asian American academics in the US. For more than two years now, Umamaheswar’s husband Alex Sinha—also a professor—has feverishly documented the digital trail of an unhinged stalker who writes hundreds of racist, violent, and vulgar social media posts daily. Wondering why nothing has been done? Apart from the fact that law enforcement is indifferent to the plight of professors facing online harassment, the stalker known as ‘S’—who Umamaheswar remembered as an otherwise “mild and unobtrusive student”—was kicked off campus and arrested back in 2020 but resurfaced awaiting a court date. S is now a jack-in-the-box who circumvents account bans. Read this chilling story in The Verge about the phenomenon of “collateral stalking”, and the rising incidents of student harassment against academics of colour. Riding on a rules discount: Change Company, a largely unknown company outside the US, became one of the biggest mortgage lenders in that country in a matter of about four years. It was the largest originator of non-qualified mortgages, which are loans with easy terms, in 2022. Key to the meteoric rise was Faith Bautista, a leader in the non-profit sector, whose high-level connections helped the company qualify as a Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI). Bautista was close to Steve Mnuchin, US Treasury Secretary in the Donald Trump administration. Together, Bautista and Steve Sugarman, the business-savvy chief strategist of Change Company, built an operation that peaked at $7.7 billion in loans in 2021. CDFI lenders are supposed to support members of underserved communities who want to buy homes. The company’s target communities as a CDFI were “Black, Hispanic, and low-income borrowers, and borrowers in designated low-income neighbourhoods”. It should have directed at least 60% of its lending to those groups, according to rules, which it never did. This Barron’s investigation reveals how the company was built on influence and laid low by hubris. Did you enjoy today’s newsletter? We accept bouquets or brickbats, whatever you choose to send us, here. Join The Signal Forum on Telegram to know what The Signal community is reading and talking about through the day. Follow us on X and Instagram for fun stuff. Also check out our other newsletters, The Playbook and The Impression. |
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