Post Magazine

United States or China as world leader? Asians overwhelmingly prefer the US, Pew study finds

When it comes to global leadership, Asia prefers the United States over China by a wide margin, according to data compiled by the Pew Research Centre.

When asked if it would be better for the world to have the US or China as the leading global power, 73 per cent of Asian respondents " represented by polls taken in Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, Indonesia and Australia " favoured the United States, versus 12 per cent for China, the new research showed.

The 25-country median " which includes Germany, Canada and Brazil " was 63 per cent for the US and 19 per cent for China, according to the research, which was presented by Bruce Stokes, Pew Research's director of global economic attitudes, at an Asia Society event in New York on Thursday.

Results of the recent US versus China leadership poll. Source: Pew Research Centre

Polls were not conducted in the US or China.

"This is fascinating for me," former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, who is now president of the Asia Society Policy Institute, said in a discussion with Stokes.

In Asia, politics stands in the way of economic integration

"If you look at the data about the preference for US leadership in Asia today, it is huge in preference for the United States despite the fact that China is the dominant economic partner for every country in East Asia," Rudd said.

The research showed international recognition of China's importance on the world stage, with 70 per cent of respondents in the broader international poll saying China "plays a more important role in the world today, compared with 10 years ago", while 31 per cent said the same for the US.

The results of another question in the global poll. Source: Pew Research Centre

"When people say they see China playing a bigger role, we don't know whether they think that's a good thing or a bad thing," Stokes said. "In terms of Chinese soft power, what really hurts them is the perception that they don't protect the civil liberties of their own people."

China's detention of ex-Interpol chief highlights its flaws

On that point, the broader international poll found that 51 per cent of respondents believe "the US is more likely to respect personal freedoms", compared with 37 per cent for China.

Responses to a question about global leadership. Source: Pew Research Centre

Indonesia showed the strongest support for China as the leading global power, though at only 22 per cent; it preferred the US with 43 per cent. For Japan, the split was 81 per cent to 8 per cent in favour of the US.

Argentina and Tunisia were the only two countries that showed a preference for Chinese global leadership. Argentina went 35 per cent for China and 33 per cent for the US, and Tunisia chose China by 64 per cent to 26 per cent.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2018. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from Post Magazine

Post Magazine6 min readWorld
Germany's China Shock: As Scholz Leaves Beijing, Others Raise Alarm About Waning Economic Honeymoon
For more than 20 years, Webasto has been at the heart of one of the great economic marriages of modern times. The German company from the industrial suburbs of Munich set up its first plant in Shanghai in 2001, the year China joined the World Trade O
Post Magazine5 min readWorld
Joe Biden Accuses China Of 'Cheating' Amid Call For Added Steel, Aluminium Tariffs
US President Joe Biden criticised Beijing during a campaign stop on Wednesday as he called for a tripling of import tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminium in what analysts characterised as a classic election-year move designed to help win support fro
Post Magazine4 min readWorld
China Is Subsidising Global Fentanyl Supply, Says Report By US Congressional Panel
China must be pressured to address the global supply of fentanyl and its ingredient chemicals, by further economic sanctions if necessary, which it is subsidising as the "scourge" kills more Americans annually than died during the Vietnam war, accord

Related Books & Audiobooks