Asia Pacific

Asia Pacific

Asia-Pacific (excluding the Middle East) is the most populous region. In 2018, it had over 3.98bn people spread over 47 countries. It had the largest total GDP of the regions in 2018 at 28.8 trillion USD. Average GDP per capita was 13,454 USD. Total exports were 8 trillion USD. Civilisation began in China around 8,000 BC. By around 2200 BC, the first imperial dynasty had begun: the Xia. The last dynasty ended in 1912. The Chinese empire gained great wealth and spread its influence through trade that reached across the continent via the Silk Roads to the Middle East and Europe beginning around 200 BC. Meanwhile in India, civilisation began in the Indus valley around 2300 BC. In the 4th century, Buddhism began to spread to East Asia and had reached Japan and South East Asia by the 6th century. In the 7th century Islam emerged, and quickly spread to Central Asia, northern India, and Western Asia along the Silk Road. Arab traders also helped spread Islam throughout South East Asia. Between the 13th and 15th centuries, the Mongols invaded China, central Asia, and northern India. Divine Winds prevented Kublai Khan’s invasion of Japan. In the 16th century, Portuguese traders arrived in India, East Asia, and South East Asia and built a commercial empire. The Dutch quickly superseded them in South East Asia. Britain, France and Spain also realised colonial ambitions in the region. Britain took control in India and defeated China in the Opium Wars, gaining Hong Kong as a result. It also discovered and settled Australia and New Zealand in the 18th century. France gained control of Indochina and settled several Pacific islands. In 1853, Commodore Perry forced Japan out of isolation. The Meiji restoration industrialised Japan and brought it to the status of a world power with the defeat of the Russians in 1905. Imperial Japan extended into the Korean Peninsula and Manchuria. After WW2 they invaded South East Asia and the Pacific. After WW2, Japan again led the way with the Japanese economic miracle, which was quickly replicated by South Korea, Taiwan, and other Asian nations. Also, after WW2, the last vestiges of colonialism were eventually swept away as the nations of Asia gained independence. China became communist in 1949. By the 1970s, China slowly liberalised their economy. It has now overtaken Japan to become the second largest economy in the world and is likely to overtake the US soon. Its Belt and Road initiative was announced in 2013. It has increased Chinese influence throughout Asia and beyond. In 1967, the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) was formed as the countries sought to build stronger political and economic relationships. In 1989, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum was founded. By 2018, this had led to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) free trade agreement. The 11 signatories are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam. The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) free trade agreement is expected to be signed in 2020. In addition to the Asian and Pacific countries from the CPTPP it also includes China, Cambodia, India (to be determined), Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Philippines, South Korea and Thailand.

OECD: Plugging the SDG Financing Gap

Ensuring Blended Finance can mobilise private finance, particularly in the Least Developed Countries and towards Social Sectors, will require a systemic and transformational approach. Even before the arrival of COVID-19,

Taiwan’s Chunghwa Telecom Takes Private 5G Tech to the Next Level

The pandemic has negatively affected enterprises in many ways — but it has also accelerated digital transformation in Taiwan’s activity in the cloud, Internet of Things, and edge technology spheres.

The Fed vs the Communist Party

Recent quarters, months, and weeks have seen a remarkable clash between the goals of the US Federal Reserve and Chinese Communist Party. One is trying to expand credit into a

Uzbekistan on the Path to Becoming Carbon-Neutral

In the race to become carbon-neutral, it is useful to look at where the race began. In Uzbekistan, a nation rich in natural gas, it began with nearly all energy
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Uzbekistan Celebrates 3,000-Year Heritage with Largest Science Event of its Kind

5th Annual Congress of the “World Society for the Study, Preservation and Popularization of the Cultural Heritage of Uzbekistan” held as part of UNESCO-backed event Uzbekistan hosted the 5th Anniversary Congress

Global Imbalances and the Pandemic

The International Monetary Fund’s tenth annual External Sector Report (ESR, August 2021) shows how current account deficits in the global economy widened in 2020 during the pandemic. On the other

Naomi Osaka: Champion of Tennis, Fashion — and Endorsements

Naomi Osaka has stormed the tennis scene, snatching up enough titles and endorsements to break some of the game’s most impressive records. Her victories over Serena Williams at the 2018

China’s Renminbi Needs Convertibility to Internationalise

On July 21, the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF) published its eighth annual report on Global Public Investors (GPI). It included a survey the asset allocation plans of
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Uzbekistan’s Dynamism Presents New Opportunities for Post-Brexit Britain

Though 5,000 km apart, the UK, an economic leader in the world, and my emerging but fast-developing nation are quietly forming a partnership no-one could have imagined three decades ago,

Asian Development Bank: Towards a Blue Deal to Restore the World’s Oceans

Investments in recovering and maintaining a functioning marine ecosystem can form the foundation of a sustainable “blue economy.” Marine ecosystems are threatened by extinction. Over the past 50 years, the

World Bank: Pandemic Recovery is an Opportunity to Step Up Climate Change Action in Europe and Central Asia

2021 needs to be the year that climate change urgency truly entered the collective consciousness and lasting action followed. In the same way the effects of climate damage are often

History and Future: Two Things Pilipinas Shell Takes Into Account in All of its Dealings

Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation traces its roots back to 1914, when the Asiatic Petroleum Company (Philippine Islands) Ltd was established and has since then established itself as a leader in
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