日本地缘经济战略:手段

Yuka Koshino, Robert Ward
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在外交事务中,日本经常被认为是一个像小国一样行事的大国。然而,这种说法忽视了日本经济治国方略的重要性、范围和有效性。在这种治国方略中,日本不仅以其实际规模行事,而且比传统外交方式拥有更多的自主权和能动性。无论是通过贸易、投资、援助、规则制定,还是至关重要的技术,小野优佳和罗伯特•沃德为我们展现了日本作为地缘经济参与者的思维和行为方式。这本阿德菲的书值得广泛阅读,因为它极大地增加了我们对日本战略中一个被忽视和低估的方面的理解。Bill Emmott, IISS董事会主席;英国日本学会会长;她著有《日本女性化程度更高的未来》(牛津大学出版社,2020年)一书,该书开创性地深入分析了日本所面临的地缘经济挑战,日本是美中竞争和经济治国方术时代的前沿国家。亚太倡议主席船桥洋一(Funabashi Yoichi)博士说,地缘经济战略——利用经济手段来确保外交政策目标和投射力量——长期以来一直是治国方术的关键要素。近年来,鉴于中国与美国的对抗日益加剧,以及北京和华盛顿在对抗中都愿意动用经济力量,这个问题变得更加突出。这一趋势对日本尤其重要,因为日本与中国的政治关系往往紧张,而中国仍是日本最大的贸易伙伴。虽然日本战后的地缘经济表现常常无法与其世界最大经济体之一的地位相匹配,但最近东京表现出了增强的地缘经济能力性和有效性。在这本阿德尔菲的书中,小野优香和罗伯特·沃德借鉴了多个学科——包括经济学、政治经济学、外交政策和安全政策——并采访了主要政策制定者,在中美大国竞争的背景下审视了日本的地缘经济实力。他们研究了日本之前的表现不佳,东京对地缘经济的理解是如何演变的,以及考虑到其国家力量投射的限制,日本可能采取哪些切实可行的行动,以成为一个更有效的地缘经济参与者。他们的结论不仅直接关系到那些关心日本大战略和亚太地区的人,也关系到那些寻求在未来几十年里驾驭大国竞争的中等大国。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Japan’s geo-economic strategy: the means
‘In foreign affairs, Japan is often thought of as a big country acting like a small one. Yet that is to miss the significance, range and effectiveness of Japan’s economic statecraft, in which the country not only acts its true size but also does so with much more autonomy and agency than it does in classic diplomacy. Yuka Koshino and Robert Ward shine a truly illuminating light on how Japan thinks and behaves as a geo-economic actor, whether through trade, investment, aid, rule-setting or, crucially, technology. This Adelphi book deserves to be widely read, for it adds greatly to our understanding of a much neglected and under-appreciated aspect of Japanese strategy.’ Bill Emmott, Chairman of the IISS Trustees; Chairman of the Japan Society of the UK; and author of Japan’s Far More Female Future (Oxford University Press, 2020) ‘Groundbreaking work and a penetrating analysis of the geo-economic challenges facing Japan, a frontline country in the age of US–China rivalry and economic statecraft.’ Dr Funabashi Yoichi, Chairman of Asia Pacific Initiative Geo-economic strategy – deploying economic instruments to secure foreign-policy aims and to project power – has long been a key element of statecraft. In recent years it has acquired even greater salience, given China’s growing antagonism with the United States and the willingness of both Beijing and Washington to wield economic power in their confrontation. This trend has particular significance for Japan, due to its often tense political relationship with China, which remains its largest trading partner. While Japan’s post-war geo-economic performance often failed to match its status as one of the world’s largest economies, more recently Tokyo has demonstrated increased geo-economic agency and effectiveness. In this Adelphi book, Yuka Koshino and Robert Ward draw on multiple disciplines – including economics, political economy, foreign policy and security policy – and interviews with key policymakers to examine Japan’s geo-economic power in the context of great-power competition between the US and China. They examine Japan’s previous underperformance, how Tokyo’s understanding of geo-economics has evolved and, given constraints on its national power projection, what actions Japan might feasibly take to become a more effective geo-economic actor. Their conclusions will be of direct interest not only for all those concerned with Japanese grand strategy and the Asia-Pacific, but also for those middle powers seeking to navigate great-power competition in the coming decades.
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