1st Edition

Political Economic Perspectives of China’s Belt and Road Initiative Reshaping Regional Integration

By Christian Ploberger Copyright 2020
    100 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    100 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The book begins with an overview on China’s Belt and Road Initiative, highlighting its complex character as a domestic and international development strategy, and offering an up-to-date evaluation of it.

    In response to this complexity, the book attempts to highlight the Belt and Road Initiative’s double character and how it will address primary domestic development challenges that the Chinese government is facing by adding an international focus to a domestic development strategy. This in turn supports the understanding of China’s political-economic policy and strategy formulation by reminding that supporting China’s domestic development is still the primary task of its government. Even as the domestic aspect of the Belt and Road Initiative is highlighted, its regional and international relevance cannot be ignored either. The Belt and Road Initiative will support a continuation of the persisting debate about the impact that China’s rise generates, and to what extent China can be characterised as a satisfied status quo power or a dissatisfied, revisionist power.

    In this context, the book draws attention to the various impacts that the Belt and Road Initiative generates in different regional settings. However, the book also identifies some of the limitations that China’s Belt and Road Initiative encounters, despite the seemingly convincing economic goals it offers, and explains why a few of the countries, like India, are resisting the lure.

    1. Introduction and Overview

    2. The Belt and Road Initiative in the Context of China’s Rise

    3. The Belt and Road Initiative in the Context of China’s Reform Process: Addressing the Challenge of Domestic Development by Supporting Transborder Cooperation

    4. Cooperation Required: Reluctant Partners, Countries with a Second Thought, and Disunity within the European Union

    5. Regionalism, Regionalisation, and the Belt and Road Initiative

    6. Conclusion

    Biography

    Christian Ploberger is an independent academic researcher with research interests in international relations, regional integration, and climate change-related risks. The geographical focus of his research is on East Asia in general and on China specifically. He has visited East Asia regularly since 1993.

    "An informative and balanced introduction to the complexities of the Belt and Road." - Shaun Breslin, Professor, University of Warwick