Tokyo’s shift on AIIB based on economics
2017-05-24 08:48:01 source:Global Times
May 23, 2017
"The first Belt and Road
Forum for International Cooperation convened in Beijing on May 14 and
15, gathering together 29 heads of state and government. However,
although he is not a state leader, the head of the Japanese delegation
Toshihiro Nikai, secretary general of the Liberal Democratic Party, also
became the focus of media coverage of the grand convention. As a
leading figure of Japan's ruling party, Nikai presented a letter from
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to Chinese President Xi Jinping and said to the media that Japan should become a member of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)
at an early date. It is nothing new that countries are eager to join
the AIIB considering its sound performance since its establishment, but
the shift from rejection to recognition in Japan's attitude deserves
deliberation in view of its resistance during China's preparation of
AIIB and now the ruling party leader showing enthusiasm toward the bank.
The primary factor behind this is the continuous growth of the Chinese economy which triggered a change in Japan's perception of China to some degree. Following the 1951 San Francisco Peace Conference, the US had long been one of the most important global order makers. Japan thus became the core country in East Asia due to its economic recovery and the Japan-US military alliance. Japan enjoyed this position in the international community. Nevertheless, China's GDP overtook that of Japan for the first time in 2010 and in 2013 almost reached twice the size of Japan's GDP. China is now the most powerful engine for development of the Asia-Pacific region. Therefore, Japan is no longer the core of East Asia and sees China's growth as a challenge to the old Asia-Pacific order."
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