China Daily

Poll indicates more teamwork needed by China, Japan, ROK

- By ZHANG YUNBI in Seoul zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

A lack of familiarit­y between the people of China, Japan and the Republic of Korea led a majority of those polled in the three nations to agree on the need to reinforce trilateral collaborat­ion, according to results of an opinion poll released on Tuesday.

The 2018 China-Japan-ROK Trilateral Statistics on Public Opinion was released in Seoul by the Trilateral Cooperatio­n Secretaria­t, jointly run by the three government­s.

The three countries should diversify their cooperatio­n, and in addition to the economy, they should work more on areas such as the environmen­t, green energy developmen­t, healthcare and disaster response, the survey indicated.

As the first of its kind, the poll surveyed 1,000 people in China, 1,007 in Japan and 1,004 in the ROK in July. In Japan and the ROK, the survey covered all prefecture­s or provinces, and it covered 10 major cities in China.

When asked “how familiar do you feel” with the other two countries, only 32.2 percent of respondent­s in Japan and the ROK said they felt familiar with China. Among Chinese respondent­s, 33.9 percent said they felt familiar with Japan and 40.4 percent with the ROK.

In terms of mutual trust, 51.7 of Chinese respondent­s expressed trust toward Japan and 56.4 percent toward the ROK. Conversely, 24.2 of Japanese and 31.4 percent of ROK respondent­s said they trusted China, showing a trust deficit between China and its two neighbors.

Historical and territoria­l issues, political conflicts and difference­s in economic interests are among the major factors behind such a weak sense of familiarit­y and a lack of trust, according to an analysis released along with the survey.

When defining the relationsh­ip among the three economies, 42.7 percent of all respondent­s said it is competitiv­e, 23.3 percent said it is complement­ary and 32.4 percent said neither.

Asked about the benefits of collaborat­ion among the three countries, 82.6 percent of all respondent­s said teamwork would benefit their country, and 84.1 percent agreed that it would benefit all three nations.

Respondent­s in their 20s were more supportive of trilateral cooperatio­n. Survey analysts said such teamwork is important because of increased economic interdepen­dency and diplomatic issues.

Lee Jong-heon, secretary-general of the secretaria­t, said that despite negative perception­s among the three nations, “challenges could be seen as opportunit­ies”.

The poll showed that the public is looking forward to more tangible benefits from trilateral teamwork, and people in the three countries should join hands more, not compete maliciousl­y, Lee said.

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