Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?

As China’s power continues to rise in Asia, her bilateral ties with Malaysia have strengthened across the board — in commercial, manufacturing, financial, monetary, and cultural domains. In October 2013, the two countries made plans to create a comprehensive strategic partnership. Given the stark as...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elsa Lafaye de Micheaux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Recherche & Régulation 2014-06-01
Series:Revue de la Régulation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/regulation/10760
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832577933769703424
author Elsa Lafaye de Micheaux
author_facet Elsa Lafaye de Micheaux
author_sort Elsa Lafaye de Micheaux
collection DOAJ
description As China’s power continues to rise in Asia, her bilateral ties with Malaysia have strengthened across the board — in commercial, manufacturing, financial, monetary, and cultural domains. In October 2013, the two countries made plans to create a comprehensive strategic partnership. Given the stark asymmetry of their relative political powers, Malaysia recognizes the risks in closer economic ties with China, but views those risks as outweighed by the benefits reaped. This paper systematically describes the reasoning behind the close China-Malaysia relationship and analyzes its political effects, all from the Malaysian point of view. Kuala Lumpur views the strategic South China Sea question as the only thorn in its side, but does not permit the issue to puncture buoyant China-Malaysia relations. The positive state-to-state bilateral relationship has flourished since 1989: China has not interfered politically in multiethnic Malaysia, despite its significant ethnic-Chinese minority. Rather, deepening ties have benefited Muslim Malays and the conservative nationalist party, the United Malays National Organization (in power since independence in 1957) more than the “ethnic business” and Chinese Malaysian population. Although opposition parties have grown stronger over time, our findings — mostly culled from more than twenty interviews with politicians, public officials, activists, scholars, trade unionists, economists and businessmen — show that an extremely broad political consensus deems China-Malaysia relations advantageous and strategic. Whatever their political leanings, Malaysians view the relationship as valuable and worth maintaining for the long run.
format Article
id doaj-art-ff800da795f44e6fa62a683866d2916a
institution Kabale University
issn 1957-7796
language English
publishDate 2014-06-01
publisher Association Recherche & Régulation
record_format Article
series Revue de la Régulation
spelling doaj-art-ff800da795f44e6fa62a683866d2916a2025-01-30T14:27:27ZengAssociation Recherche & RégulationRevue de la Régulation1957-77962014-06-011510.4000/regulation.10760Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?Elsa Lafaye de MicheauxAs China’s power continues to rise in Asia, her bilateral ties with Malaysia have strengthened across the board — in commercial, manufacturing, financial, monetary, and cultural domains. In October 2013, the two countries made plans to create a comprehensive strategic partnership. Given the stark asymmetry of their relative political powers, Malaysia recognizes the risks in closer economic ties with China, but views those risks as outweighed by the benefits reaped. This paper systematically describes the reasoning behind the close China-Malaysia relationship and analyzes its political effects, all from the Malaysian point of view. Kuala Lumpur views the strategic South China Sea question as the only thorn in its side, but does not permit the issue to puncture buoyant China-Malaysia relations. The positive state-to-state bilateral relationship has flourished since 1989: China has not interfered politically in multiethnic Malaysia, despite its significant ethnic-Chinese minority. Rather, deepening ties have benefited Muslim Malays and the conservative nationalist party, the United Malays National Organization (in power since independence in 1957) more than the “ethnic business” and Chinese Malaysian population. Although opposition parties have grown stronger over time, our findings — mostly culled from more than twenty interviews with politicians, public officials, activists, scholars, trade unionists, economists and businessmen — show that an extremely broad political consensus deems China-Malaysia relations advantageous and strategic. Whatever their political leanings, Malaysians view the relationship as valuable and worth maintaining for the long run.https://journals.openedition.org/regulation/10760ChinaMalaysiabilateral cooperationnon interferenceYuan-Ringgit monetary integrationEthnic business
spellingShingle Elsa Lafaye de Micheaux
Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?
Revue de la Régulation
China
Malaysia
bilateral cooperation
non interference
Yuan-Ringgit monetary integration
Ethnic business
title Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?
title_full Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?
title_fullStr Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?
title_full_unstemmed Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?
title_short Chine-Malaisie (vue de Malaisie) : menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuité ?
title_sort chine malaisie vue de malaisie menace ou relation consensuelle inscrite dans la continuite
topic China
Malaysia
bilateral cooperation
non interference
Yuan-Ringgit monetary integration
Ethnic business
url https://journals.openedition.org/regulation/10760
work_keys_str_mv AT elsalafayedemicheaux chinemalaisievuedemalaisiemenaceourelationconsensuelleinscritedanslacontinuite