China has vowed to push its southwestern province of Yunnan as a gateway to the vast market of South and Southeast Asian nations to forge closer ties with the region and offset US-led geopolitical pressure and economic rivalry.
Billed as the "pivot to South and Southeast Asia", Yunnan has been tasked with building the "high land" of opening up, according to a statement by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the country's top economic planner.
It pledged to further support Yunnan, which borders three Southeast Asian neighbours - Myanmar, Vietnam and Laos - to "speed up the construction of major international corridors" via transport, logistics, energy and digital information connection with its southern neighbours.
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"[We will support Yunnan] to expand and strengthen its unique advantaged industries and support the province to actively undertake domestic and international industrial transfers," the agency said.
China has moved closer to Southeast and South Asia in recent years as its relations with the US have deteriorated. And it has strengthened the push of the mega go-global strategy of the Belt and Road Initiative in the region while the flagship project has encountered backlash in Europe.
The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) has become China's largest trading partner in recent years. The bloc has risen as the destination for foreign investors diversifying their supply chain away from China.
Asean is a key part of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership trade pact that also includes China, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
Liu Yuanchun, president of Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, has called on Beijing to deepen economic cooperation with Asean countries, viewing the region as a buffer against US moves to decouple from China.
"[The region] plays an important intermediary role and an indirect bridge between China and the West," Liu said in an interview with Chinese media The Paper on Thursday.
Last year, China's trade with Asean was US$975.3 billion - up from US$641.5 billion in 2019 - which is a 24-fold increase since 2000, according to customs data.
Liu said China must proactively explore more cooperation opportunities with emerging markets, including Southeast Asia, to offset its falling trade with developed countries.