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THE Pacific Rim

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Confucius- societal order- pursuit of harmony. ... to cars to electronics to semiconductors guided in large part by the government. ... The Four Tigers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE Pacific Rim


1
THE Pacific Rim
  • Christopher Clott

2
Importance of the Pacific Rim
  • U.S. Merchandise trade with the Pacific Rim is
    larger than with any other area in the world.
    Major trading partners include China, S. Korea,
    Japan, Taiwan and Sing.
  • Pac Rim countries produce more than one fourth of
    the worlds Gross Domestic Product and contain
    over one third of the worlds labor force and
    retail consumers.

3
What is the Pacific Rim?
4
Major Themes of Discussion
  • Progress and Tradition The tensions of centuries
    old traditions tied to advanced economic
    development.
  • Collisions between East and West Huge
    differences of culture and ideas between these
    two major groups of people.
  • Democracy, Authority and Power What is a
    democracy? Is it necessary for economic growth?
  • Economic Interdependence The Pacific Century?

5
China- 6000 years old
  • The Mandate of Heaven- The Middle Kingdom,
    source and center of civilization.
  • Confucius- societal order- pursuit of harmony.
  • Daoism/Buddhism- the heart, understanding of the
    natural world. The mind and the heart

6
The Dominance of China
  • In 1492 as Columbus discovered the Americas,
    China was the most advanced nation on earth.
  • Chinese inventions of paper, porcelain and
    gunpowder among others far beyond Europe.
  • Trade with China avidly sought by the West since
    the time of Marco Polo. The Silk Rd

7
Chinas Impact
  • Chinese written characters, legal framework,
    Confucian/Buddhist ideals underpin the Pacific
    Rim countries.
  • China turned inward during the Ming and Manchu
    dynasties. Innovations, power and development
    would shift to Europe. China governed by a
    series of warlords by the 1800s. Forced to
    accept foreign controls and make humiliating
    concessions (The Opium Wars) etc.

8
Rise of Japan
  • Alone among Pac Rim nations for never being under
    foreign dominance. Japan closed to all foreigners
    by Tokugawa from 1612 to 1853 when Commodore
    Perry and the Black ships forced Japan to open to
    the outside.
  • After great confusion and hostility the country
    in the Meiji era learns from the West- borrowing
    and adapting Western ideas to the Asian world.
  • Japan becomes a formidable power by 1900 but is
    all but ignored by the Western world.

9
Pressures on Korea
  • The three kingdoms that make up Korea are beset
    by internal divisions, cultural conservatism and
    the overwhelming power of Japan which conquers
    the country twice.
  • The Taft-Katsura agreement- negotiated by the
    U.S. and Japan cedes influence of Japan over
    Korea while U.S. will influence the Philippines.
    Japan governs Korea harshly from 1905 to the end
    of WWII.

10
The Treaty of Versailles 1919
  • A pivotal year. Old European empires are weakened
    after WWI.
  • Japan expects to be rewarded for being on side of
    Allies. They are not and the Generals take over.
  • Nationalism and democratic ideals encouraged by
    the words of President Wilson are not rewarded or
    encouraged. Chiang Kai-shek, Ho Chi Minh,
    Sukarno, Sun Yat Sen and Syngman Rhee will emerge
    as patriots and leaders during this time.

11
Events leading to WWII
  • War began when the U.S. put an embargo on the
    sale of oil to Japan from the Dutch controlled
    East Indies.
  • Japan had been forcibly annexing parts of China
    since the 1920s. The Generals running the
    country were bent on dominance within Asia- saw
    the U.S. as the biggest roadblock.

12
WWII and the Aftermath
  • Status of China- internal battle for control
    between Communists and Nationalists.
  • Japan high water mark was 1942 conquered much of
    Southeast Asia- destroyed colonialism but left a
    lasting distrust.
  • Did the bomb have to be dropped? - Victimization
    of Japan.
  • American Occupation 1945-1951 Constitution and
    important reforms.

13
Rise of Japan
  • The Korean War 1950-53 and continued U.S.
    involvement. Need for military bases.
  • Edward Deming and Joseph Juran. Total quality
    control (TQM) taught to the Japanese- ignored in
    post-war U.S.
  • MITI and Industrial policy. From toys to steel to
    ships to cars to electronics to semiconductors
    guided in large part by the government.

14
Japan Ascendant
  • U.S. preoccupied with Cold War issues- A
    disastrous military presence in S.E. Asia.
  • Japanese Keiretsu become world powers. Trade
    frictions and restructuring of U.S. industry in
    the 1980s.
  • An economic superpower but politically invisible.
    The bubble economy and decline.
  • The need for Wa harmony in all things makes it
    difficult to restructure in the 90s.

15
Japan Descendent
  • End of the Bubble Economy and Government
    paralysis and corruption.
  • Cutting edge, highly competitive industries but
    the need for change from the outside.
  • Worlds second largest economy but unable to take
    actions to restructure debt ridden banks and get
    rid of zombie companies.
  • Restrains world growth.

16
The Four Tigers
  • S. Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong all
    begin there journey to economic power in
    different ways.
  • S. Korea - rising from the ashes of war through
    exports by Chaebol cos.. Heavy govt..
    interference. Corruption, a lack of
    entrepreneurs, and the need for heavy defense
    restrain it. We are treaty bound to defend Korea.
    N.Korea remains very dangerous.

17
The Four Tigers (cont.)
  • Taiwan- settled by Chiang Kai-shek and those who
    escaped the Communist takeover of China in 1949.
    China views this as the 19th province and is
    threatened by independence talk. We are treaty
    bound to defend Taiwan but would we?
  • Emerged as a powerful economy but a political
    non-country as China grew.
  • Massive investment in China by Taiwanese
    business.

18
Hong Kong
  • SARS
  • The last colony ruled by the British from the
    1840s to 1997 when the handover to China is
    made. Very controversial.
  • Hong Kong given 50 years to keep the current
    system separate from that of China.
  • The nation has thrived as a trade conduit
    throughout its existence but is now under more
    pressure from China.

19
Singapore, Malaysia
  • Singapore emerged as a prosperous nation-state
    after WWII. Ruled with an iron hand by Lee Kwan
    Yew. Economically prosperous Chinese business
    community but socially engineered and no
    tolerance of dissent.
  • Malaysia- emerged as a major player in the 1990s
    thanks to low labor costs and investment from
    Japan, the U.S. and Singapore. Heavy handed
    control and jailing of adversaries by Dr. Mahatir.

20
China Wakes
21
Two Quotes
  • China is like a sleeping giant. Let her sleep.
    For when she awakes she shall astonish the world
    Napoleon- 1817
  • China is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an
    enigma Churchill- 1939
  • A most complex country!!!

22
Post WWII
  • 1949- The Communists take over China. Set about
    remaking an ancient society. Disastrous
    industrialization in 1958 (The Great Leap
    Forward) and destruction of the Middle class in
    1966 (The Cultural Revolution) set back the
    nation.
  • Mandarin becomes the official language and China
    is able to feed its massive population.

23
The Thaw
  • President Nixon and the trip to China- 1972
  • Late 1970s- Deng Tsiao-Ping takes over.
  • Reforms started in 1979- Black cat, white cat,
    as long as it catches mice what is the
    difference?
  • Special Economic Zones along the coast to contain
    and control capitalism.
  • 1989 Tiannemen Square

24
The Middle Kingdom takes world stage
  • Workshop of the world- enormous consequences for
    Pac-Rim neighbors, the U.S. and the world.
  • Now the worlds fourth largest economy.
  • WTO membership in 2001. Olympics will be held in
    Beijing in 2008.
  • What does Communism mean in a fast-changing
    society? Power struggles within the government.
  • A billion people striving for a better life. But
    gaps between rich and poor are immense.

25
The Asian Financial Crisis and Aftermath
  • Economic wreckage and pain in Thailand, Indonesia
    and the Philippines. Massive corruption (crony
    capitalism), Rise of Islamic fundamentalism.
  • Asian values are slowly giving way to more
    openness in the global economy.
  • U.S. involvement must be clear-eyed and obvious.
    Our future is tied to complex relationships with
    the Pacific Rim countries.

26
The End
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