Advertisement

The View | Global warming and robotics: the two biggest threats to the ‘Asian Century’

Region’s rise is by no means ‘preordained’, says Asian Development Bank in its book, Asia 2050: Realizing the Asian Century

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
A beer assembly line inside a brewery in Shenyang, Liaoning province. Such automation could keep factory jobs and provide more high-end jobs. But as China moves up the value chain – and no longer has an endless supply of cheap labour – India and the ASEAN member countries are expected to fill its role. Photo: Reuters

We are living in the “Asian Century”, so called because by 2050, the region is projected to be as wealthy as Europe on a per capita basis, and hold a dominant share of global economic output.

Advertisement

But what if it turns out to be the “Asian Half-Century”?

The narrative of an increasingly rich and busy Asia assumes we will continue on the current trajectory, however many things could go wrong.

“Asia’s rise is by no means preordained,” the Asian Development Bank wrote in its book, Asia 2050: Realizing the Asian Century.

If, for instance, various countries did not escape the so-called Middle Income Trap– where nations get richer but not as rich as the West on a per capita basis – then the region’s share of global GDP would stay where it is today, at just over 30 per cent.

Advertisement
loading
Advertisement