Whichever way you look at it, China looks set to become an increasingly significant nation in the world of tomorrow. If things keep going on the way that they are it booming economy and industrial output will make it a financial power. Its policy of trade-and-aid without social or economic strings will give it soft power in abundance, and its increasingly Westernized military looks set to give it some real hard power in the not to distant future, too.
With this rise there have been some inevitable questions. "How far will China rise"?, and "how quickly"? "Will a rising China be a stabilizing or a destabilizing force in Asia, and the world beyond"? and, of course, the ever inevitable "At whose expense will China's rise come"?
On that last point, a lot of fingers seem to have pointed in one direct, that which is occupied by the US. With a great many observers (depending on which side of the fence they sit) either wringing their hands with worry or with glee, at the thought that China might be set to knock America down a peg or two as an economic power and a purveyor of influence, or simply by out-muscling it in Asia with its military.
Whether or China will actually rise at America's expense remains to be seen, as does how much Chinese will actually rise in the end. After all, it is a country with a lot of social problems, a lot of environmental problems, and a nasty habit of shooting itself repeatedly in the foot by doing things in relation to Tibet, Taiwan, and human rights, that are not taken well by the international community.
However, with all of the above being true, it would seem that there is one area where it is certain that China will rise and America will fall. This being the area of public perception, not that public perception of China will rise while perception of America will fall, but rather that the public at large seems to expect China to go up and America to go down.
According to a survey carried out across 9 of the world's strongest economies by Gallup International (commissioned by Bertelsmann Stiftung), the world's public expect America to loose a significant portion of its status as a world power by the year 2020, with only 61% of those questioned expecting America to still be a a world power in little over 10 years. A fall of 20% over current public perceptions. Accordingly, 57% of people surveyed expect China to be a world power in 2020, a rise of 7% over current perceptions. Putting belief that China will be a dominating world power only 4% behind beliefs about America.
Other findings
In other finding, the survey revealed that the majority of the world's population considered climate change to be a greater threat than terrorism. With the US listing climate change as being a lesser threat, one on equal footing to the problems caused by poverty and overpopulation. In contrast, Chinese listed climate change as the biggest threat to the world, and war as being the second biggest.
When it came to rating the three most important qualities for a world power, American chose (in order) a strong economy, a good education system and a powerful military, while Chinese chose a strong economy, political stability, and a powerful military. The percentage of Chinese who rated stability as an essential quality was almost double the number of Americans, while more than twice as many Americans believed that it was important to be a social/cultural role model to other nation as did Chinese.
Ironically, 59% of Chinese felt that building democracy and human rights should be a main goal for a world power. A view shared by only 42% of Americans.
In the opinion of this old man who has seen the worst and the best of
nearly a century, the worse thing that ever can happened to a country and
especially its people is that it become a superpower. If China wants it, I
say all the power to ya.
To me China is both a threat and an inspiration. I love the Eastern
philosphy and culture and I love the free enterprise system. I believe the
world is big enough for the US, China, Russia and Iranian super powers!
The only threats posed by China are to America's bottom line and to it's
political clout. There's no way that China would ever actively attack the
West. At most it would throw a few bombs around in a conflict over Taiwan,
but none of them would even be aimed at America, let alone actually hit it.
The China that will rise to and maintain a superpower status will be
fundamentally different from the nation we are looking at today.
Additionally, this would not necessarily come at America's expense. For
instance, China's success in obtaining raw materials determines the quality
of life for American consumers since our retail supply chain is highly
dependant on Chinese manufaturers. We are intertwined whether we like it or
not. I feel a warm fuzzy when people talk of American decline because this
galvanizes our institutions to change. Hubris can inhibit progress. Our
singular hegemony will be a thing of the past but America will have a few
tricks and unanticipated developments up its sleeve. In the final analysis
China will become a superpower in a multipolar world. Lets not forget Japan
and the EU-both economic superpowers.
History has shown such shifts in power to happen violently and if such
theories hold true, it doesn't look like there will be much peace in the
world over the next century with respect to the US, China, India and
possibly Russia.
ACB: I believe the Power Transition Theory is more applicable here than the
Balance of Power Theory. Then again, it's been quite some time since there
has been such instances of possible shifts in power so close to one
another. There are countries who are eager to rewrite the current set of
rules as established by US Hegemony.
Fortunately, surveys like this are poor predictors of what the future will
hold. It is highly unlikely the US will decline in power in this century
or be surpassed by China in anything that is not population dependent.
Furthermore, the world would not benefit from a hegemonic China. Just ask
the Tibetans, the Sudanese, the Taiwanese, and anyone else that China has
any influence on.
Right now, there seem to be a great many people who disagree with you, many
of them are Congressmen and Senators. Check out PBS, America's leaders are
very worried indeed. American military, political, and economical power are
all taking big hts and look set to take bigger hits still due to (in no
specific order):
"the world would not benefit from a hegemonic China. Just ask the Tibetans,
the Sudanese, the Taiwanese, and anyone else that China has any influence
on"
"the impetus for post-Cold War global military retreat was the United
States' own doing"