Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:371Hits:21109578Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID179273
Title ProperInterdependence, Identity, and China–South Korea Political Relations
Other Title InformationAsia’s Paradox
LanguageENG
AuthorByun, See-Won
Summary / Abstract (Note)Research on the relationship between international economic and political relations has produced no consensus on the pacifying effects of trade. Rapid trade growth and enduring tensions characterize post–Cold War Asia’s paradox. This study assesses the political effects of China-centered interdependence based on the China–South Korea case since 1992. Although trade may inhibit conflict in line with liberal expectations, its coercive potential limits its pacifying effects. When disputes arise, asymmetric interdependence generates strategic leverage and vulnerability, and amplifies the identity dimensions of conflict that shape societal preferences. China’s combination of economic pressure and nationalist discourse induces accommodation primarily through coercion. By blending state-led and society-led retaliation, economic and accountability costs are minimized. China–South Korea political interactions have increased in quantity but not quality. The Asian case underscores qualitative changes in political relations (rather than just instances of conflict), the material and nonmaterial repercussions of asymmetric trade, and the regional security implications of China-led interdependence.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Survey Vol. 61, No.3; May-Jun 2021: p.473–499
Journal SourceAsian Survey Vol: 61 No 3
Key WordsConflict ;  Identity ;  Coercive Diplomacy ;  Interdependence ;  China-Korea Relations


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text