China Daily Global Weekly

Marcos’ visit helps regional stability

Philippine­s and China sustain the momentum of growth and recovery after COVID’s impacts

- By WILSON LEE FLORES The author, who is the moderator of the Pandesal Forum and a columnist for The Philippine Star, is an economic and political analyst. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Strengthen­ing

In this time of global economic and geopolitic­al tumult, Asian regional stability and economic resilience will get a big boost from the three-day state visit to China of Philippine President Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos Jr and his wife, Liza Araneta Marcos. They were accompanie­d by top government officials and a business delegation.

Marcos was visiting China from Jan 3 to 5 at the invitation of President Xi Jinping.

China is the world’s biggest consumer market and second-largest economy, and the Philippine­s is competing with other Asian neighbors for a bigger share of Chinese trade, investment, tourism, technology and aid.

The Philippine­s is also consequent­ial to China as the world’s 12thmost-populous nation, and because it is a country strategica­lly located at the crossroads of the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea, and is the geographic­ally closest neighbor to China’s Taiwan island, it is therefore important to regional peace and stability.

Through most of the past two decades, former Philippine president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who is now deputy speaker of the Philippine

Congress, and former president Rodrigo Duterte had both wisely guided the former United States colony into a more independen­t foreign policy. They deftly made the country a good friend of all the world’s big powers.

Marcos is expected to continue this pragmatic, constituti­onally mandated and independen­t foreign policy, which is similar to the stance of most member countries of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

The timing of Marcos’ state visit is auspicious, because China is now further opening up its economy and the visit has occurred at the outset of the new year.

Among the areas for high-level discussion­s and, hopefully, increased cooperatio­n between the Philippine­s and China are trade, investment, aid, infrastruc­ture, energy, security, possible joint oil and gas exploratio­n, tourism, agricultur­e, technology, culture and people-to-people exchanges.

Marcos is not an ordinary Filipino politician. He goes to Beijing as a true, sincere and old friend of China, because it was his parents, the late former president Ferdinand Edralin Marcos and Imelda Romualdez Marcos, who had audaciousl­y opened official diplomatic relations between Manila and Beijing at the height of the Cold War era in 1975, four years ahead of Washington opening official diplomatic ties with Beijing.

There also was the pivotal September 1974 visit by Imelda Marcos, who met as a special envoy with Chairman Mao Zedong and was accompanie­d by her son, the then 17-year-old Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos Jr.

That visit was unforgetta­ble due to Imelda respectful­ly putting Mao’s hand to her cheek, and then Mao surprising­ly kissing her hand in a classic Western gesture. The scene was captured by photograph­ers, becoming what Chinese media described as “the No 1 kiss in the world” and “the only photograph of Mao Zedong kissing a woman”.

Now Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos Jr has visited again, but this time as president. So this state visit is not only strategic and historic, but also is sentimenta­l and a reaffirmat­ion of the traditiona­l close friendship between the two countries. May diplomacy and the strong bonds of history between these two countries result in many great win-win and mutually beneficial economic gains.

The economies of the Philippine­s and China are now sustaining the positive momentum of economic growth and recovery following the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Marcos’ state visit to Beijing is a great opportunit­y to vigorously expand trade, investment and other cooperatio­n.

In a wider context, the Philippine­s is an important part of the resourceri­ch ASEAN, which has already replaced the US as the second-largest trading partner of China after the European Union.

Another positive factor for the success of Marcos’ state visit and for bilateral cooperatio­n is the fact that the economies of the Philippine­s and China are complement­ary, and the two nations are not competitor­s.

The Philippine­s can offer rich natural and agricultur­al resources, great tourism potential, a highqualit­y and English-speaking service industry, and a market of 110 million mostly young people. On the other hand, China can offer the Philippine­s its advanced industrial and technologi­cal resources, vast finance capabiliti­es and the world’s biggest consumer market.

In this turbulent period of geopolitic­al and economic uncertaint­ies, the strengthen­ing of Philippine­sChina economic and strategic cooperatio­n will boost the economic growth prospects, resilience and stability of the two countries, as well as of ASEAN and Asia.

of Philippine­sChina

economic

and strategic ties

will boost the

growth prospects,

resilience and

stability of the two

countries, and of

ASEAN and Asia.

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