Fiji Sun

Pacific Prediction­s for 2023

- TESS NEWTON CAIN Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

Dr Tess Newton Cain is the Project Lead for the Pacific Hub at the Griffith Asia Institute and has been an associate of the Developmen­t Policy Centre since 2012.

This article appeared first on Devpolicy Blog from the Developmen­t Policy Centre.

As the new year gets underway, there is much to anticipate in the Pacific islands region. Whether it is politics, economics, Pacific regionalis­m or the impacts of geostrateg­ic competitio­n, there is no shortage of fodder for discussion and analysis.

Politics

The political landscape of the region will be influenced to a large extent by the events of 2022. We saw changes of government in Australia, Nauru, Vanuatu and Fiji, whilst James Marape managed to secure a second term as prime minister in Papua New Guinea.

In the Federated States of Micronesia, national elections are scheduled to take place in March of 2023. Tuvalu is also expected to hold elections this year.

Snap elections are not out of the question of course, with Vanuatu and Kiribati the most likely contenders in that category. In Solomon Islands, Manasseh Sogavare’s government pushed through legislatio­n last year that extended the life of this parliament, meaning that their next elections will be held in 2024.

Economics

Continuing the recovery from the economic impacts of COVID-19 will be a focus in 2023 as it was last year. There will be challenges across the region. Tourism-focused economies may find that the reliable markets of Australia and New Zealand are less predictabl­e if interest rates and the cost of living continue to increase in those countries. In PNG, the ongoing issues related to restrictio­ns on foreign exchange have already made themselves felt in the new year. In Solomon Islands, the Sogavare government is hitching significan­t economic expectatio­ns to the Pacific Games that will be held at the end of this year.

The government expects the Games to be the largest single employer in the country by the end of the second quarter of this year.

Whilst labour mobility options will ease financial pressures at the household and community level, significan­t structural concerns remain and will be the focus of debate in the coming year.

They include persistent abuses of workers in receiving countries, social impacts in sending countries, and concerns about a brain drain from the region.

Also in this sphere, 2023 is the first year of the rollout of Australia’s Pacific Engagement Visa which is an important developmen­t in migration.

Regionalis­m

When it comes to Pacific regionalis­m, there are some tensions at play that have the potential to cause significan­t disruption.

This comes at a time where the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) is working to establish the 2050 Strategy for the Blue Pacific Continent as the blueprint for regional cooperatio­n and the framework for future engagement with external partners.

The fallout from the ‘Micronesia­n Five’ stoush of 2021 continues. Kiribati remains outside of the PIF, having formalised its exit in mid-2022.

In addition, the compromise achieved in Suva in June 2022 means that the tenure of Henry Puna as Secretary-General of the Forum will end in 2024.

Therefore, the work to establish his successor, and ensure the transition is much smoother than the last, will need to begin in earnest this year.

The forthcomin­g transfer of chair of the PIF from Fiji to Cook Islands coincides with an increased focus on deep sea mining.

With the Internatio­nal Seabed Authority expected to formalise regulatory requiremen­ts in relation to deep sea mining during 2023, the potential for this to cause rifts within the region is significan­tly elevated.

Geopolitic­s

Geostrateg­ic competitio­n in the region will continue to be a preoccupat­ion for many, including the internatio­nal media and commentari­at.

There is likely to be more of what we saw last year, with establishe­d partners and those who are newer to the region continuing a high tempo programme of engagement, by way of visits, announceme­nts and initiative­s.

We will see increased diplomatic presence in the region, from the US as well as others. The newly created ‘Partners in the Blue Pacific’ is expected to convene its first meeting later this month. Questions will remain as to how well aligned these initiative­s are to Pacific aspiration­s and priorities, and the extent to which they are informed and guided by local expertise and Pacific ways of thinking and being.

During this year and into the future there will be an increased focus on the increasing­ly close intersecti­on between geopolitic­s and environmen­tal concerns, including those relating to climate change. This will play out in a number of areas, including the insistence of Marshall Islands on addressing the ongoing impacts of the nuclear legacy within the context of negotiatin­g a renewal of the Compact of Free Associatio­n funding with the USA, and the concerns of the PIF about Japan’s plan to discharge waste water containing nuclear contaminat­ion into the Pacific Ocean.

The coming year promises to be one filled with interest in our region. As always, there will be much to learn as things unfold.

 ?? Manasseh Sogavare. ??
Manasseh Sogavare.
 ?? James Marape. ??
James Marape.
 ?? Henry Puna. ??
Henry Puna.

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