The Politics Of Business And Economics In Asia.
'Australia and the Asia Game' goes beyond political platitudes to examine reality and opportunity in Australia's place in Asia, and in doing so reveals the essence of a game that affects every nation in the region.
Asia's economic power has never been greater. Japan is firmly entrenched as the second largest economy in the world, and China is rapidly building itself into the next global economic superpower. Despite their economic success stories, China and Japan have little in common other than two things. They distrust each other deeply. And they play the same game.
Australia is central to North Asia's economic rise, providing minerals on a huge scale to feed industries which have become the pride of modern China and Japan. Yet by the time Australians realise they are engaged in a contest in Asia, it is often very nearly over. To successfully compete in Asia, Australia must know how Asia thinks and operates. Australia must recognise the traps in Asia's economic and political power games, and use the rules of play to its advantage.
Marrying economic pursuit with human and political goals, the Asia game is all about organising to create the preconditions of control. Asian groups divide and conquer, exploiting Western notions of individual competition. Following their tactical advantages in dealing with Australia and the West, they play a winning game which is repeated in many seemingly unconnected areas, from Japan's coal trade with Australia to the Indonesian Government's castigation of the Australian press.