China Daily (Hong Kong)

New world order is the inevitable trend

-

After decades of turbulence, the world order led by the United States has begun to change, with the 2008 global financial crisis possibly being the turning point and this year signaling a new beginning.

On the global front, the strength of developing countries has greatly increased. For example, China has been playing a greater role in global governance to build a “community of shared destiny”, as propounded by President Xi Jinping.

And the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has predicted the share of high-income countries in the global purchasing power parity-based GDP will drop from 64 percent to 39 percent, with Asian emerging powers’ share increasing from 12 percent to 39 percent, with China taking 21 percent.

The changing world order is not about the decline of the US but about the rise of other countries, as Fareed Zakaria, a CNN journalist and author of The Post-American World, said. Neverthele­ss, global governance is set to change from West-led governance to co-governance by the West and East, as the democratiz­ation of internatio­nal relations is a wish shared by all countries.

A multipolar world order and globalizat­ion will be the highlights of the new era. Countries across the world are willing to compete and cooperate on the basis of fairness and justice, yet the deadlock between emerging powers and the establishe­d ones will continue for some time.

The changing world order has also caused uncertaint­y, instabilit­y and increased geopolitic­al risks, especially because the US still practices “American exceptiona­lism”, worrying about the rapid rise of emerging countries. As a result, the US has been more vigorously implementi­ng the “rebalancin­g to the Asia-Pacific” strategy, and complicati­ng the Korean Peninsula nuclear and South China Sea issues.

Another feature of the changing world order is the intensific­ation of conflicts between countries that support and Donald Trump, the US’ focus has been to increase its own benefits. The fact, however, is that only when they cooperate with others can they benefit from each other to have a win-win outcome.

What the Trump administra­tion refuses to accept is that the rejection of globalizat­ion will destabiliz­e the world in a long run. In contrast, to strengthen globalizat­ion, China has proposed projects such as the Belt and Road Initiative and a community of shared destiny.

Moreover, the concept of regional and global security, too, is changing. As such, despite the existence of competitiv­e military alliances and global security partnershi­ps, eventually all countries have to cooperate to seek common security and peace.

After the end of World War II, the US entered into many bilateral and multilater­al military alliances to maintain its supremacy, based on which a global security system led by it was built. But in the changing world order, it is difficult for the US-centric military alliances to maintain world peace or ensure the US’ own security. According to a Pew Research Center poll across 37 countries, global trust in the US has been declining sharply.

Still, as a pillar of the US’ global strategy, Washington’s military alliances will not end in the short term; instead, they could gain in strength.

Even the developing new world order will create some challenges related to globalizat­ion and geopolitic­s that will continue to bother the internatio­nal community. The urgent need is for all countries to make sincere efforts to achieve peaceful developmen­t. And China, as a responsibl­e power, will keep pursuing the path of peaceful developmen­t and win-win cooperatio­n to help make the world a better place for future generation­s.

The author is former Chinese vice-foreign minister and co-chairman of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China