What Money Can’t Buy: The Security Externalities of Chinese Economic Statecraft in Post-War Sri Lanka

Q1 Social Sciences Asian Security Pub Date : 2017-12-28 DOI:10.1080/14799855.2017.1414045
Darren J. Lim, R. Mukherjee
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引用次数: 24

Abstract

ABSTRACT China’s growing trade, investment, and aid links are commonly believed to constitute a potent instrument of statecraft, generating important security externalities. Yet there is insufficient research tracing the precise mechanisms linking economic relationships between a “sender” and “target” state to actual influence in the security domain. We offer three contributions. First, we map out the theoretical mechanisms of influence in a sender–target relationship. Second, we empirically investigate these mechanisms through a case study of China’s economic influence in Sri Lanka since 2009. Third, we use our findings to generate new insights on the mechanisms of influence in the economic statecraft literature and the dynamics of great-power competition in South Asia. Beijing’s ability to convert its considerable economic resources into strategic influence in Sri Lanka is currently hampered by the poor planning and implementation of infrastructure projects, domestic politics, and Sri Lanka’s relationship with India, a regional competitor and rising power.
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金钱买不到什么:战后斯里兰卡中国经济策略的安全外部性
人们普遍认为,中国日益增长的贸易、投资和援助联系构成了一种强有力的治国手段,产生了重要的安全外部性。然而,对于将“发送国”和“目标国”之间的经济关系与安全领域的实际影响联系起来的确切机制,尚无足够的研究。我们提供三种贡献。首先,我们绘制了在发送者-目标关系中影响的理论机制。其次,本文以2009年以来中国对斯里兰卡的经济影响为例,对这些机制进行了实证研究。第三,我们利用我们的研究结果,对南亚经济治国方术文献中的影响机制和大国竞争动态产生新的见解。北京将其可观的经济资源转化为在斯里兰卡的战略影响力的能力目前受到基础设施项目规划和实施不力、国内政治以及斯里兰卡与地区竞争对手和崛起大国印度的关系的阻碍。
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来源期刊
Asian Security
Asian Security Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
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