新冠肺炎时代的地缘政治变迁与亚洲基础设施投资银行——以中国多边主义创新为例

David L. Morris
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摘要

中国将如何为全球治理做出贡献,已成为国际关系中的一个重要问题,而新冠肺炎疫情、地缘政治竞争升级和危机中的多边主义之间的联系,更是放大了这一问题。中国一直在加倍推行其专制的国内治理模式,同时在国际上变得更加自信,包括在现有的和新的多边机构中。与此同时,美国近年来似乎正在破坏它自己建立的自由主义国际秩序的制度、规范和规则。随后国际合作的减少对公共卫生、经济和其他形式的安全构成严重威胁。在日益恶化的国际环境下,中国能否与其他各方合作,为稳定全球治理贡献公共产品?从世界卫生组织和世界贸易组织等联合国机构到区域全面经济伙伴关系等区域倡议,有很多机构可以考察中国在国际治理中日益增长的作用,但本文考察的是亚洲基础设施投资银行(AIIB),这是中国在多边主义中创新的一个例子。亚投行在地缘政治竞争中成立,旨在解决亚洲在可持续发展融资方面的赤字问题。亚投行挑战了许多现行规范,包括让中国和其他发展中国家发挥更相称的作用,取代美国和发达经济体在多边体系中不成比例的权力;以中国对东亚发展模式的信心为基础,重新关注以基础设施为主导的发展;以及摆脱利用融资条件推动自由民主和新自由主义经济改革的布雷顿森林体系做法。在代表着对传统秩序的挑战的同时,世行展示了——至少到目前为止——执行方面的最佳实践,并解决了发展中国家以前未得到满足的关切。虽然不可能仅从一项倡议中推断出中国未来在全球治理中可能扮演的角色,但亚投行的案例表明,至少在某些领域,中国将挑战自由主义规范,改革而不是彻底改变国际秩序。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Geopolitical Shift at a Time of COVID-19 and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: A Case Study of Chinese Innovation in Multilateralism
How China will contribute to global governance has become a critical question in international relations, amplified by the linkages between the Covid-19 pandemic, escalating geopolitical contest and multilateralism in crisis. China has been doubling down on its authoritarian model of domestic governance while becoming more internationally assertive, including in existing and new multilateral institutions. Meanwhile, the United States appeared in recent years to be undermining the institutions, norms and rules of the liberal international order that it, itself, built. The subsequent decline in international cooperation poses grave risks to public health, economic and other forms of security. Can China cooperate with other actors to contribute public goods and stabilisation of global governance in such a deteriorating international environment? While there is a wide range of institutions in which to examine China's growing role in international governance, from United Nations bodies such as the World Health Organisation and World Trade Organisation to regional initiatives such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, this paper examines the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), an example of Chinese innovation in multilateralism. Established amidst geopolitical contest, the new institution seeks to address the Asian deficit of financing for sustainable development. The bank challenges a number of prevailing norms, including replacing the disproportionate power of the US and the advanced economies in the multilateral system with a more proportionate role for China and other developing countries; a new focus on infrastructure-led development which is built on Chinese confidence in the East Asian development model; and a shift away from the Bretton Woods practices of using financing conditions to drive liberal democratic and neo-liberal economic reforms. At the same time as representing a challenge to the traditional order, the bank exhibits – at least to date – best practices in implementation and addresses previously unmet concerns of the developing world. While it is not possible to extrapolate from only one initiative to draw comprehensive conclusions about China's likely future role in global governance, the AIIB case nonetheless suggests that, at least in some fields, China will challenge liberal norms to reform rather than revolutionise the international order.
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