CHINA is “very
much concerned” over the impending decision of the Permanent Court of
Arbitration on the territorial case filed by the Philippines which is expected
to be released this year, the Department of Foreign Affairs said Monday.
The DFA released
the statement amid economic analyses that the slowdown of the Chinese economy
may propel Southeast Asian nations to be drivers of growth in the region.
“In our analysis,
China is very much concerned
over the legal fray because [China ]
is discrediting the arbitration process from the start. It also boasts that
many nations support its claim,” said Foreign Affairs Spokesperson Charles
Jose.
Jose said that
while China
repeatedly insists that it will not respect the international court decision,
the world’s second largest economic giant appeared to be concerned with the
decision because it would affect their international standing and image.
“The Philippine
government is guardedly optimistic of the forthcoming ruling which may be
issued in the next few weeks,” Jose said. “We are optimistic for a favorable
ruling because the nine-dash claim of China has no basis under the
international law.”
Meanwhile,
economic analysts in region surmised that the slowdown of the Chinese economy
may have a bigger impact on Southeast Asia that the United
Kingdom ’s exit from the European Union because many
nations in the region are reliant on trade with China for growth.
But while many
are feeling the impact of that slowdown, the region’s growing middle class is
helping to act as a buffer.
“From 2000 to
2005 and then comparing from 2006 to 2014, what we found was in the first
period, the US or even the EU, was a more important driver of export growth in
Asia, and in the most recent period it is actually China across the board, from
a sensitivity perspective,” said Joseph Incalcaterra, an economist with HSBC.
“The slowing
growth in China, even though we don’t forecast a hard landing, what we’re
seeing is a gradual occurrence that is actually weighing down exports in the
rest of the region,” he added.
While Southeast
Asia’s exports may be slowing in parallel with Chinese demand, the region’s
young population and growing middle class may propel Southeast
Asia to be a driver of growth in the region.
Earlier this
year, the Asia Development Bank predicted economic expansion in Southeast Asia would rise 4.5 percent in 2016 and 4.8
percent next year.
That’s up from a
4.4 percent rate of expansion in 2015. Six-hundred-twenty-million people live
in the region, and 25 percent of trade is with other Southeast Asian nations,
providing a buffer to China ’s
slowdown.
Despite broad
changes in political leadership and recent elections in the Philippines , Myanmar ,
Vietnam and Laos , investment from China ,
India , Russia and the U.S.
is pouring into Southeast Asia .
Trade between the
U.S. and Vietnam rose to $45 billion in 2015, and U.S.
President Barack Obama is pushing for a Trans Pacific Partnership, a trade
agreement between the U.S.
and 11 Pacific Rim nations that would provide a counterbalance to China ’s
economic influence and continue to support growth in the region.
http://thestandard.com.ph/news/-main-stories/top-stories/209280/china-very-concerned-over-hague-decision.html
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