Beyond just cooperation: the competitive Sino-Japanese economic ties
The relations between China and Japan during the last two decades have been politically cold and economically hot. How do we define the "hot economy"? By reviewing history and evidences, the two Asian giants have established quite close, intense but complicated economic ties since...
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Format: | Theses and Dissertations |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2015
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65006 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | The relations between China and Japan during the last two decades have been
politically cold and economically hot. How do we define the "hot economy"? By
reviewing history and evidences, the two Asian giants have established quite close,
intense but complicated economic ties since the 1970s. The various contentious
economic issues have not only created mutual benefits but also stimulated bilateral
rivalry at the same time. The simultaneous scenarios of benefit and conflict have drawn
an even more controversial picture on the either cooperative or competitive economic
relations. Based on theories of relative gains supported by neorealism against absolute
gains promoted by neoliberalism, this dissertation aims to analyze the competitive
nature of Sino-Japanese economic ties. Although cooperation is often understood as the
core characteristic to describe the bilateral economic relations, competition, in essence,
is the implication and the latent phenomenon behind the cooperative relationship.
This dissertation shows neither a positive nor a negative attitude toward SinoJapanese
ties, based on the perspective that the economic relations are neither a
completely confrontational rivalry nor an entirely cooperative friendship. In specific, the
research will be conducted through three aspects in the bilateral economic relations:
trade, FDI, and energy. The author will illustrate these respects using the latest
theoretical and empirical literature on Sino-Japanese economic relations. China and
Japan do share common risks and there are numerous opportunities for them to
implement a variety of cooperative practices, but competition has inevitably become the
main and essential feature, as China has displayed a more aggressive gesture vis-a-vis
Japan while Japan has increasingly viewed China as a main economic and military
competitor. |
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