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Australia in the Asian Century

Posted: Sun Oct 28, 2012 8:58 am
by Gob
Australian PM Julia Gillard has outlined a major foreign policy plan aimed at improving Asian ties.

A government white paper sets out 25 national objectives to be met by 2025, with targets ranging from improving trade links to teaching more Mandarin.

Mrs Gillard said she wanted to refocus Australia away from Europe's "old countries" towards its near neighbours - particularly China and India.

The plan is detailed in a 312-page paper, Australia in the Asian Century.

With Asia on track to become home to most of the world's middle class in the next 20 years, this was a moment in history to grasp, said Mrs Gillard during the release of the white paper at Sydney's Lowy Institute.

"The scale and pace of Asia's rise is staggering, and there are significant opportunities and challenges for all Australians," she said.

"It is not enough to rely on luck - our future will be determined by the choices we make and how we engage with the region we live in."

While Mrs Gillard underlined continued strategic ties with the US, her speech formalised trends built up during the past three decades in which China has become Australia's top trading partner, ahead of Japan, the US and South Korea, says the BBC's Duncan Kennedy in Sydney.

Previous prime ministers such as Bob Hawke and Paul Keating established the first ties with Asia, but the new policy would be deeper and more organised, adds our correspondent.
Some of the goals outlined are specific, others more aspirational. They include:

Boosting Australia's average national income from $62,000 (£41,000) per person now to $73,000 in 2025
Improving the school system so it is ranked in the world's top five, with 10 of its universities in the world's top 100
Making studies of Asia a core part of the Australian school curriculum
Giving all students the opportunity to learn a priority Asian language - Chinese (Mandarin), Hindi, Indonesian or Japanese
Making sure more business leaders are "Asia-literate"
A member of the 21-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) group, Australia is one of the 11 nations involved in negotiations for a Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), both of which aim to liberalise regional trade.

On security issues, Australia in the Asian Century says any policy aimed at containing China's military growth would not work.

Rather, it says Australia can balance its defence ties to the US while backing China's emerging military strength.

Re: Australia in the Asian Century

Posted: Sun Oct 28, 2012 11:59 pm
by rubato
Saying that Aus. is going to pursue greater ties with emerging Asia is more descriptive than prescriptive. The challenges which would concern me if I were an Australian are: First. Aus is a small country, demographically and economically speaking, surrounded by whales. China, India, Indonesia, Phillipines, Japan are all much larger. Losing autonomy is a real threat. Second. Aus is dependant on extractive resources, coal mostly. If the world needs to transition away from fossil fuels in general, and coal is the worst, then Aus. needs an economic reason to exist which can replace it. What is that?

If Aus. wants to maintain their autonomy then do they have any choice other than to continue their bonds with the US and Europe?



yrs,
rubato

Re: Australia in the Asian Century

Posted: Mon Oct 29, 2012 7:47 am
by The Hen
We have rejected and neglected our Asian entity since we began as a nation.

We are Pacific Rimmers and should accept and nurture our Asian bonds. The least we can do is make amends for our supreme arrogance and learn their languages in preference of other, less useful, ones. (I was pleased when the Hatch gave up the French she was taught through primary school, for Japanese throughout her high school and college years. It makes FAR more sense.)