Andrew Leung International Consultants Ltd

The “China Dream” under the new leadership And implications for the world order and businesses

Andrew K P Leung, SBS, FRSA

A presentation to the JHIA Asia Pacific Conference 2013 Beijing Marriott Hotel Northeast

10-14 July, 2013

1 Table of Contents THE BIG PICTURE 1. The New Leadership - Run-up to the transition - New Line-up - Concept of the “China Dream” 2. China – A Balance Sheet - China’s Rise - Challenges, Barriers, Crises, and Conundrums BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 3. The holy grail of China’s consumer markets 4. Targeted industries, technologies and services 5. The ascent of the RMB 6. Energy security and green development 7. Major reforms ahead

SHIFTS IN THE WORLD ORDER . 8. Changing tide in world dynamics 9. China in a re- balanced world 10. Which way is the tide turning? 2 How does the CPC work?

3 How are the leaders selected?

4 Princelings v Tuanpi

• Career affiliations

• Leadership track record

• Lack of scandals

•Intra-Party respectability and popularity (Central Committee 350, Politburo 25)

• Personal ties

5 Socio-political dynamics

Central Political and Legislative Affairs Committee Central Guidance Commission for Extractive regimes – Building Spiritual Revolutionary ideals Civilization

6 Civic protests - 180,000@ yr 500@day Food safety Weibo – 100 m twits@day Health warnings and bottlenecks

Unbalanced, Unstable, Uncoordinated, Unsustainable Catching-up on innovation Worker’s rights

Aging population Middle-income trap Energy security Accusation of protectionism 7 Politburo Standing Committee

习 近 平

President and CMC Chairman

张 李 俞 德 克 正 强 江 声

Premier of State Council NPC Chairman CPPCC Chairman

王 张 刘 岐 高 云 山 丽 山

Secretary CPC Central Secretary, Central Commission First vice premier of State 8 Secretariat for Disciplinary Inspection Council Vice President, V. Premiers, and State Councillors Vice President, First Vice Premier, PSC 2nd Vice Premier, 3rd Vice Premier , 4th Vice Premier, Politburo Member Member Politburo Member Politburo Member Politburo Member

Li Yuanchao Zhang Goali

State Councillor, , State Councillor, former State Councillor, State Councillor, General Secretary Minister of Defence Minister of Foreign Affairs Minister of Public Security head of SASAC

Yang Jing Guo Shengkun 9 The “China Dream”

More than American Dream Gov’t cleaner, army for people More equal and dignified, if poorer, lives

Ideals corrupted and lost

Strong China Civilized China Harmonious China Beautiful China Robert Lawrence Kuhn, New York Times, 4.6.13 10 Rising China

IMF predicts 2016 11 Emerging affluence

Soaring of the EAGLEs

12

Globalsherpa.org Globalized dependency 2010

13 Global connectivity

2nd , 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th, 8th top container ports

• Rise of middle-class travel

• To buy 5,260 more planes by 2032

• New supplementary Beijing airport with 6 runways to open 2017

• Beijing to overtake Atlanta possibly end-2013

• China to eclipse U.S. before 2030.

(USA Today, Jan, 2013) 14 China begins to shop the world

McKinsey Quarterly – Mapping China’s Middle Class (June, 2013)

•Urban consumers ($9,000 - $34,000 household income PPP (x2.5) ~ Brazil/Italy) to grow 4% (2000), 68% (2012), to 75% (2022) •According to Brookings Institution, consuming middle-class to grow from 12% to 70% of China's population by 2030. •Upper Middle Class ($16,000 - $34,000) v Mass Middle Class ($9,000 - $16,000) (2012) 14% v 54% - (2022) 54% v 22%) •World Luxury Association 2010-2011 report - world’s largest luxury market from 2012. •Megacity (Tier 1) v Tier 3/4 cities (2012) 40% v 15% + 3% v (2022) 15% v 31% + 8% • 2.7 m US$ millionaires, 251 US$ billionaires (Hurun Wealth Report , Nov 2012) ( v 13% or 150 m < $1.25 @day) •Generation 2 (G2) (up to 25 yrs of age) 200 m or 15% urban consumption (2012) v 35% and numerically 3x US baby boomers) (2022) – Largest e-marketplace •Consumption 36% GDP (v 71% in US) but Credit Suisse - China to displace US in global consumption by 2014 (China Development Research •Overall, 80 % under 45 years of age, v 30 % in the US and 19 % in Japan (The Foundation, 2012). 15 , Bestseller Press, 2010). Driving global consumption growth

93 m private cars, 2012

16 Global power of cities

17 Largest and fastest urbanization in history

McKinsey Global Institute –

• 350 m more urbanites > whole of US, by • 54% of urban GDP in 900 smaller cities 2025 by 2025, to house70% population • 1 b in cities by 2030 • 221 new cities @1 m v 35 in Europe • China’s GDP will have multiplied 5 times • 170 mass transit systems will be built • 50,000 skyscrapers = 10 NY Cites 18 Innovative capacity

• Top patent filer first developing country in a century • Largest 36.4% growth 2011 v EU 5.4% decline • 80% home-grown filings v 50% in US • 30 x increase in complex filings 1995-2008 • 1.4m trade mark filings out of 4.2m worldwide • 2010-11, 61.8% of trade mark filings worldwide v US 6.2% • 90% of global growth in industrial design filings 09-11 • + 60% in R & D productivity (filings @$ )2000-1

19 Five Year Plans going Green

• Five Year Plan (2006-10) narrowly delivered reduction of energy input @GDP by 20% and CO2 emission by 10%.

• Five Year Plan (2011-15) - non-fossil fuel to rise to 11.4% of primary energy consumption, energy intensity to reduce by 16%, CO2 emission by 17%.

• IEA - China investing $2.3 trillion in energy development 2001-30. $200 billion for renewable energy within next 15 years, to grow from 7% to 10% annually by 2010 and 20% annually by 2020.

• National Development Reform Commission - 15% renewable energy by 2020. Government to boost renewable energies target to 20% of China’s total energy needs.

20 Asymmetric military deterence

White Paper on China’s Armed Forces,2013 a) Never to seek hegemony. Core aims is to safeguard sovereignty, security, territorial integrity, and peaceful development; (b) New security concept of mutual trust, mutual benefit, equality and coordination in maintaining peace and stability. Strategies of Comprehensive Security, Common Security and Cooperative Security (c) Fallacy of the Air-Sea Battle argument for first-strike to paralyse China's entire C2ISR network by shifting the burden of escalation

21 Struggling for harmony between states

22 China Dream of Renaissance no longer illusive?

China and the World by 2030, Professor Hu Angang, Institute for Contemporary China Studies, Tsinghua University, Oxford Chin and World Economic Forum, 9 May, 2012

• By 2030, China’s economic size more than double of the United States (in PPP terms = nominal x 2.5), equal to sum of U.S., EU and Japan, regaining one-third share of the global economy, similar to the position it held in 1820.

• GDP@ still 52.0-56.2% of the US

• ODI to reach $4.5-5 trillion, largest in the world

• Becoming the world’s unrivalled economic superpower; an innovative country with highly- developed knowledge-capital; and a green nation of common prosperity 23 Reality check - Internal mountains to climb

24 Age of resource scarcity and ecological strain

• 97% power reliant on water • 50% GDP in water-scarce 25 provinces Labour supply - Lewis curve turning point

26 Development - Middle-income Trap

Experience shows that most countries reaching $3,000 to $8,000 @income seem to stall in productivity and income growth

27 Demographics - Getting old before getting rich

• In 2009 , 167 million over-60s = 1/8 of population. By 2050, - 480 million • In 2000, six workers for every over-60. By 2030, barely two. • The 4-2-1 family structure . 150 million single –child offspring faces burden of elderly support • Working age population (15-64) starts to dwindle from 2015 28 External barriers

Geopolitical rivalry Pivot to Asia TPP – no China Diaoyu islands

ASEAN New Taiwan relations “Security threat”? Concert of Asia 29 Soft Power deficits

Against rent-seeking and abuse of power

30 International perceptions

U.S. Public opinion on China and Foreign Policy, Chicago Council on Global Affairs, 10 Sept, 2012

• Wars have overstretched America for dubious gains. More Americans are wary of getting involved in potentially high-cost foreign entanglements. Majorities (both Republicans and Democrats) oppose using U.S. troops if China invaded Taiwan (69%, up 8 points since 2004) and if North Korea invaded South Korea (56%),

• A majority (53%) says that the United States should put a higher priority on building up strong relations with traditional allies like South Korea and Japan, even if this might diminish U.S. relations with China. However, there is a substantial and growing minority (40% up from 31% in 2010) holding the opposite view.

• PEW 18 September 2012, US public deeply concerned about China's economic power. Few, except the young, see China as trustworthy. Though most want to share leadership with China, a majority feels that the US remaining the leading superpower would make the world more stable, with the experts believing that a strong relationship with China is important. 31 • Multiple “crises” demand a China 3.0

European Council for Foreign Relations (ECFR), Mark Leonard (ed.), November, 2012 32 “Affluence crisis” New Right – “”Marketization”

New Left – bridging the wealth gap

•Harvard economist •1958 Best seller •Growth at expense of poverty •Public goods neglect •2.7 m millionaires (Hurun, 2013) v 170 m < $1.25 @day 33 “Stability crisis”

Wang Qishan’s favourite read? •Extractive institutions Checks and balance •Crony capitalism •Princelings

34 “Power Crisis” Geopolitics

35 Shambaugh’s 4 conundrums

China to remain a “Partial Power” despite consensus on reforms of (a) economic model (b) government monopoly (c) inequality (d) rule of law (e) ethnic harmony (f) political liberalization within One-Party state (g) accommodating foreign policy Path Dependency Soviet shadow

Vested interests Aggrieved nationalism

36 Winning the $30 trillion emerging consumer markets

• Global trend adding 400 m each to low and medium middle classes during 2010-20. (BBVA Research, Jan, 2013)

• 1 b new consumers (over $20,000 p.a.) added by 2025. 60% in Emerging 400 cities. EM (4.2 billion people) consumption to rise by $10 trillion to $30 trillion (about ½ of world) by 2025. (MGI, June 2012)

• The young (20’s and 30’s) lead the way (driven by e-tailing)

• Global consumption share –

(2020) – China (13%), US (12%) India (11%), Japan (6%), Germany (4%), UK (4%)

(2030) – India (23%), China (18%), US (7%), Indonesia (4%) Japan (4%)

37 The holy grail of China’s consumer markets

McKinsey Quarterly, March 2012 • Oct, 2012, Consumption = 55% GDP > Investment (50%) and net exports (5.5%) (Reuters) • Now 157 m consumers, world’s largest but only 12% population, to grow to 70% by 2030 (income 100% > $100@day PPP)

• Consumer trend shifting westward, to interior, 2nd and 2rd tier cities McKinsey Quarterly, August 2012 (Chengzhou, Chongqing, Hunan, Hebei, Anhui etc ) Follows manufacturing relocation trend. Foreign brands focus on rapidly growing 3rd tier cities (Trading China, Reuters, April, 2013)

• Post-'80s overspend their parents. Extra 126.5 m over 65 by 2020, but those over 55 still reluctant to consume (Mckinsey Quarterly, March 2012)

38 China - the world’s largest e-tailing marketplace

MGI (“China’s e-tailing Revolution”) , March 2013 • E-tailing $190 b sales 2012 • 120% CAGR since 2003 • > 6 m e-merchants on Taobao • Singles Day 2012 - $4 b online sales > U.S. Cyber Monday • E-tailing huge potential – • Largest online population with 130 m residential broadband accounts • Broadband penetration only 30% • Online sales to reach $650 b by 2020 • Potentially to lift private consumption”+ 4-7 % by 2020 • Tier 4 cities average online shopper 27% disposal income through e-tailing • To boost retail sector productivity + 14%

39 Targeted industries, technologies and services

40 China’s “dollar trap”

(Redbacks for Greenbacks: The Internationalization of the Renminbi, Francois Godement et al., China Analysis, European Council on Foreign Relations and Asia Centre, November 2010) • ‘Economy too serious to be left entirely to economists’ – Clemenceau

• Our Currency, Your Problem – April 2005, Hoover Institution, Niall Ferguson – ‘Bush tax cuts and war on terror financed with a PBOC overdraft (China’s huge purchase of Treasury bills), a ‘Chinese tribute ‘to the American Empire’, April, 2009

• Since 1944, the dollar has lost 97% of value against gold. Following continuing bouts of QEs, 13 March, 2009, Premier openly worried about China’s $1 trillion in US Treasuries. To some in China, US monetary policy a central pillar of US ‘economic hegemony’ and floating rate as ‘a mechanism for plunder.’

• Exchange rate very heart of China’s economy, which underpins political survival. Wary of leaving it entirely to market forces beyond the nation’s control.. 41 ….. and how to get out of it

42 RMB eclipsing the dollar as “reference currency”

"Eclipse: Living in the Shadow of China’s Economic Dominance", Arvind Subramanian, Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington D.C., October 2012

• Currency movement coefficient (CMC)

• East Asia already a RMB bloc - 7 currencies out of 10 co-move 40% greater than for the dollar.

• With China’s expanding global trade , a larger RMB bloc could emerge in the mid-2030s

•Directly convertible now with greenback, yen and now Australian dollar.

•RMB internationalization quickening; $, yen, Australian dollar (5% currency reserve), GBP? HK leading offshore centre (offshore RMB interbank rate-fixing (to be aided by Qianhai) with London, Singapore , Taiwan and other centres vying for a share 43 Paper Money – World economic order re-balancing and RMB ascent

Paper Promises – Money, Debt and the New World Order, Philip Coggan, Penguin Books, 2012

• QE money creates claims not wealth and result in hoarding and speculation > investment or consumption

• US debt largest ($14.3 T) in 212 years history, to reach US$68,500 @worker in advanced country.

• US needs tightening of 7% GDP to stay even but Medicare and Medicaid will rise from 27% GDP to consume whole federal budget by 2025. Median age to reach 42 by 2050.

• China saves to loan the money for US to spend on Chinese goods, while US keeps on eroding the loan value. Unsustainable relationship. Biggest saver, largest creditor.

•Inflation, Stagnation, Default (or default but name - currency depreciation through money-printing)

• August 2011 Xinhua warns “US can no longer borrow its way out of its own mess”.

• China changes from manufacturer to consumer + ODI

• New economic re-balance “Grand Bargain” needed. – A New Order probably “Made in China” with RMB as a leading44 currency when fully convertible 2015-2020. Energy security

45 Shale gas to change everything?

• IEA - gas use to rise by 50% for over 25% of world energy demand becoming second largest primary energy source after oil but ahead of coal. • US is set to overtake Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world's biggest energy producer by 2017, according to a 2011 November IEA report • U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that China has 1,275 TCF of technically recoverable shale gas reserve, or 19.25% of world’s total v 862 TCF in the U.S. • Shale gas is 43% and 30% less in CO2 emissions compared with coal and oil, which together represent some 90% of China’s total energy use, while 55.2% of China’s oil is imported 46 • But water intensity and aquiver pollution pose huge ecological challenge. Staying the course in green development

Circular economy law, 2008 Sept, 2012 -Enacted permits (~$1@metric ton = 1 billion mts= ½ whole EU by 2015) 2020 -2050 Targets (2012)–

Renewables (6.7%) - 16% - 45%;

Nuclear (0.7%) 4% - 10%;

Fossil (92.6%) 80% - 45% Solar Energy

• World's largest solar-panel manufacturer, 70 % global solar-energy market, capacity of 18 GW in 2010. • NYSE-listed Suntech founder China's 4th richest > $1.4 b • Worldwatch Institute, Washington DC - China has 30 m solar households, 60% of world’s installed capacity • New generation of energy-efficient buildings incorporating solar energies for application nationwide. • China now a leader in advanced solar technology. 2009, US Applied Materials Inc., one of world's largest photovoltaic equipment suppliers, established solar technology centre in Xi'an, Shaanxi, one of the world's biggest and most-advanced private solar energy R&D facilities. • 2/3 of China’s land area receives > 2,000 hrs sunlight annually, > many other regions of similar latitude, including Europe and Japan - a potential solar energy reserve = 1,700 b tons of coal. • China’s single time-zone covers 3 time zones. When electricity is at peak in early evening in eastern areas, west China can still supply solar energy available in the daytime. • Grid parity in China by 2018,, two years ahead of US. • Current installed capacity < 1 GW. To double target capacity from 5 GW to 10 GW by 2015 and 50 GW by 2020. 48 Wind Energy

• CHINA > America as the world leader in wind energy in 2010, Global Wind Energy Council.

• China's installed wind capacity increased exponentially from 0.3GW in 2000 to 42.3GW in 2009, now 22% of world’s total.

• In 2010, more turbines were installed in China than America (The Economist, 3 February 2011)

• Wind power, much in Gansu, Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia, expected to grow from 1 GW to 30 GW, to power some 13-30 million households by 2020. 49 Hydroelectric Power

• China's hydropower generating capacity reached 200GW as of 2010 > 20% of total power- generation capacity, revising target of 380GW to 430 GW by 2020 • Three Gorges Dam to increase hydroelectric power from 108 GW to 290 GW by 2020. • 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15) to increase conventional hydropower plants by 1/3 to 83GW and to raise pumped-storage hydro-capacity by 60 % to 80GW. (Pumped-storage uses low-cost, off- peak electric power, released during peak demands when prices are higher.) New projects mainly in mountainous south-western provinces such as Yunnan and • Hydropower capacity ranks as the world's biggest. However, utilization rate still lags behind other countries. • On-grid tariff charged by power producers to grids for hydropower lower than energy produced by coal-fired plants. Parity is a long-term aim.

50 Bio-fuels

• 2005 China was world’s third largest biofuel producer. 2006, NDRC set a target of meeting 15% of transportation energy needs with biofuels by 2020 • 2009, China’s ethanol projects had a total capacity of 2.2 m metric tons or some 47,000 barrels per day in Heilongjiang, Jilin, Henan, Anhui, , and Chongqing. China the world’s third largest ethanol producer, generating 1 b gallons annually . • Gasohol, a mixture of petrol and and ethanol, has been made mandatory. in Heilongjiang, Julin, Liaoning, Ahhui, and Henan. • China has a large and growing biodiesel producing capacity. 2009 - 2.1 million tons, or 41,000 barrels per day. 2005 biodiesel output capacity was 300,000 metric tons, almost double 2004, from almost zero in 2000. • December 2007, economic incentives to encourage bio-fuel production by non-food agricultural products e.g. biomass, sweet sorghum and cassava. • Since 2007, 26 million households have switched to methane gas generated by human and animal waste. 51 Making coal energy cleaner

• Proportion in primary energy consumption dropped from 72.2 % in 1980 to 69.4% in 2007.

• In 2004, China’s coal industry > 35 % of world’s production , 80% of coal-mining deaths. Stands to benefit hugely from cleaner, safer, and more affordable coal extraction and liquefaction technologies.

• Closure of small, inefficient, and often unsafe coal-fired facilities < 10m KW completed by 2007. Next those with capacity < 50m KW. 70 GW of obsolete capacity phased out 2006 – 2010. 8 GW more to be scrapped in 2011.

• SASOL has shelved CTL plants in Ningxia and Shaanxi to conserve cash. Other projects proceeding e.g. 20 new projects to be approved by NDRC in 2013, some to start in 2014, involving Pennsylvania’s Air Products and Chemicals Inc., Air Liquide, Siemens, General Electric, Shell, Linde Group and Hong Kong-listed Yingde Gases Group Co

• World Bank’s International Finance Corp has signed an equity-and-loan deal with Xinao Group to convert coal into dimethyl ether, a cleaner gas used for cooking and heating or as a substitute for diesel fuel. 52 Afforestation

• Forests a powerful carbon sink. Since 1978 a forestation belt of 4,480 km, the Green Great Wall, the world’s largest single ecological project, is absorbing 1 billion tons or 20% of China’s carbon dioxide emissions by 2010.

• Afforestation needed to counteract 2.6 m sq km desertification threatening the livelihood of some 400m people in China.

• China's forest coverage reached 20.36 % or 195 m hectares by end 2008, beating a goal of creating 20 % coverage by 2010.

• Five Year Plan (2011-15) - forest coverage to rise to 21.66 % and forest stock to increase by 600 m cubic meters.

• China has been cracking down hard on illegal logging and illegal trade of timbers.

53 Major reforms ahead

2020 Target

• China to become middle-income country by 2020 - President Hu, 18th Party Congress • From $5,500 in 2012 to $10,000 requires average growth < 7% - Not beyond reach

2030 – World Bank Report with Development Research Centre of State Council

• Local authorities to be regulated (v land grabs) • SOE reform • reform • Universal access to healthcare, education and housing • Improve governance through the middle-class • Liberalize financial system to achieve higher TFP • RMB internationalization and eventual full convertibility • Green economy with cap and trade + procurement standards • Responsible stake-holder in global order 54 Suggested 10-year roadmap for political reform

• Professor Yu Jianrong, Chinese Academy of Social Science, April 2012 Phase One - 2012 – 2015 (1) Rural land rights, improved welfare, and hukou system changed (2) Staff, finance, and properties of primary and intermediate courts to be controlled at provincial level; life appointment of judges with high salaries, subject to mandatory mobility and strict accountability; retrograde and obsolete state organs to be abolished, e.g. “political-legal committees” below the provincial level (as they often tend to take the law into their own hands), the State Bureau for Letters and Calls for petitions to Beijing (outstanding grievance cases to be resolved through judicial processes), and the labour re-education system (thereby safeguarding citizens’ personal rights) (3) Press freedom and freedom of expression. This extends to transparency of administrative information, declaration by officials of their private assets, and prohibition of punishment for expression. (4) Social development and civil society. This covers the improvement of neighbourhood management, promotion of charitable organizations, and protection of religious organisations. Phase Two – 2016-22 (1) Professionalization of county-level deputies elected to the National People’s Congress; scrapping the system of appointing county-level officials from the outside; introducing “differential-quota” competitive elections for the top county leader; and turning county and township levels of government into subordinate outposts of higher authorities. (2) Open society. This comprises the formulation of laws for press freedom and laws for political parties. The management of the media and political organizations is to be liberalized. 55 Changing tide in world dynamics

“Democracy worst form of government except all others tried”

1989-92 56 Pax Americana adjusted

World Bank, 1998 2003 Start of the Great Re-divergence?

58 Democratic liberalism questioned

59 Rise of state capitalism

2004 2011

60 The “Great Degeneration” and a fractured Europe

Representative government (IOU on future generations), the free market (million-page regulations) , the rule of law (lawyers) and (un)civil society 61 “Great Convergence” and “Great Re-divergence”

20.11. 2012, ASEAN+ 6 FTA = ½ world pop, 1/3 GDP Flexible bonds in a multi-polar world

63 Global Trends 2030 National Intelligence Council, Washington DC, December 2012

• By 2030, developing world > 50% of world's economy with China displacing US as largest economy. • Global economic power shifting to East and According to OECD report November 2012, South, reversing historic rise of West c. 1750. • Power to become more diffused in a multi- • China > euro zone in 2012 and the US by 2016 to become the largest economy in the world” polar world, including individuals and non-state actors. According to Goldman Sachs - • America to lose its global dominant position • China's economy already > rest of BRICS but is likely to remain primus inter pares. combined. • Unprecedented urbanization, rise of the middle-class, new, disruptive, or lethal • 2050 top 10 economies - China ($70 T), US ($38 technologies, resource constraints, more aging T), India (= US), Brazil (> $10 T), Mexico (<$10 T), Russia, Indonesia, Japan, UK and Germany populations, and risks of more crises and ($5 T). conflicts. • A great re-balancing of the world will be • Only 4 G7 to remain on this list. Except the US, the other 3 G7 countries, Japan, UK, and Germany, taking shape, perhaps not dissimilar to the to fall to bottom of list. European "long peace" after Congress of Vienna in 1815, which was also a multi-polar • Combined economic weight of 6 Emerging and period of rapid social, economic, technological Growth-leading Economies (EAGLEs) = 2 1/2 times 64 remaining G4. and political change. The battle of ideas and cultures Victor Hugo – “Nothing is more powerful than an idea whose time has come”.

A future multi-polar world?

US, United Europe, Russia, United Islamic Republic , China, Neutral + allies 65 China in a re-balanced world

• Re-balancing a larger West (drawing Russia and Turkey closer to Western norms (EU + WTO (for Russia)

• Re-balancing a Complex East –

• Pivot to Asia to neutralize China’s dominance

•“U.S.-Japan-China cooperative triangle” supported by U.S. treaty obligations - China not to view U.S. support for Japan's security as a threat, nor Japan to view more extensive U.S.-Chinese partnership as a danger

• Refrain from provocative reconnaissance operations at China’s doorstep

• Closer U.S.-China military-to-military dialogue to build strategic trust

• Explore an accommodative formula to maintain Taiwan’s integral identity, pending longer-term development

• West and East relationship can only be either reciprocally cooperative or mutually damaging”.

(2012) 66 A possible new Asian order

• American Asian primacy since 1972 now being contested • Asian theatre overwhelmingly important to China’s survival and influence • To Asia China economically more important than America even before overtaking US in a decade or so. • China’s military budget (2013) $114.3 b only 1/5 of U.S., 2% GDP v US 4.7%, but air-sea, nuclear submarine and anti-ship missile “anti-access, area-denial” capabilities vastly improved plus credible 2nd –strike retaliatory nuclear power • Military force - not fire-power, how much, how large, how extensive but how effective where and when it counts • Asian allies want US to balance against China but not prepared to fight U.S. hegemony war unless China threatens own sovereignty and identity • Costs of enforcing U.S. primacy incommensurate with outcome 67 Intangible Power

68 “Time and tide wait for no man”

There is a tide in the affairs of men. Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; Omitted, all the voyage of their life Is bound in shallows and in miseries. On such a full sea are we now afloat, And we must take the current when it serves, Or lose our ventures. 69 Does the “China Dream” And which side is the tide remain half empty ? turning?

70 Andrew Leung International Consultants Ltd

Thank you

Andrew K P Leung, SBS, FRSA www.andrewleunginternationalconsultants.com

International and independent China Specialist with over 40 years professional experience covering Hong Kong and . Chairman of Andrew Leung International Consultants, founded in London now relocated to Hong Kong. Provides strategic advice on China-related finance, investment, politics and economics globally, including both business and governments. China Futures Fellow selected worldwide by Berkshire Publishing Group, Massachusetts. On the Brain Trust of Evian Group, a Lausanne-based think-tank. Founding Chairman of China Group of Institute of Directors City Branch, London. Advisory Board Member of China Policy Institute, Nottingham University, 2005-10. Governing Council, King’s College London, 2004-10. Visiting Professor with Metropolitan University Business School. Helped set up Standard Chartered Bank’s first merchant-banking subsidiary in Hong Kong (1983); oversaw the trans-migration of industries into China as Deputy Director-General of Industry; US-government sponsored month-long visit to brief Fortune 50 CEOs on China beyond Tiananmen Square (1990); Editor-at-Large of a London-based international consultancy on China’s energies (2007). Sponsored Speaker on China at international conferences, including Forum Istanbul, Turkey, Annual African Banking and Financial Institutions Conference in Accra, Ghana, and Low Carbon Earth Summit in Dalian, China. Regular interviewee on live television with CNBC, Aljazeera English, Times Now of India, BBC and other international channels. Awarded Hong Kong’s Silver Bauhinia Star (SBS) and included in UK's Who's Who since 2002. 71