Albanese's China mission - managing a complex relationship in a world of shifting alliances
Mr Albanese's domestic critics have lambasted him for meeting Chinese leader Xi Jinping before United States President Donald Trump. They are also aggrieved at his refusal to label China a security threat.
But neither criticism really stacks up.
An Albanese-Trump meeting would have happened last month on the sidelines of a G7 gathering in Canada. It was Mr Trump who left early, standing up more leaders than just Albanese.
Nor is Mr Albanese the first Australian prime minister to meet a Chinese president before an American one. His predecessor Tony Abbott caught up with Mr Xi a few weeks after coming to office in 2013, before he had a chance to meet President Barack Obama.
'Friends, not foes'
Meanwhile, polling indicates just one in five Australians see the relationship with China first and foremost as 'a threat to be confronted'. Rather, a clear two-thirds majority see it as 'a complex relationship to be managed'.
Mr Albanese is also regarded as more competent than his opposition counterpart in handling Australia's foreign policy generally – and better at managing the China relationship specifically.
The prime minister's Chinese hosts also have an incentive to ensure his visit is a successful one.
In the past fortnight, China's ambassador in Canberra, Xiao Qian, has penned opinion pieces in two of Australia's biggest media outlets, insisting Australia and China are 'friends, not foes' and touting the 'comprehensive turnaround' in bilateral ties since Labor won government in May 2022.
Beijing and Washington view each other as their geopolitical priority. Beijing can make it harder for Washington to enlist security allies such as Canberra in this rivalry by maintaining its own strong and constructive bilateral ties with Australia.
And quite apart from the competition with the US, China relied on Australia last year as its fifth largest import source.
Plenty of complaints
None of this is to say Mr Albanese's visit will be easy, because Australia-China relations are rarely smooth.
Anthony Albanese will visit China for the second time in his tenure. ( Reuters: Athit Perawongmetha )
Canberra continues to have many complaints about China's international behaviour.
For example, Foreign Minister Penny Wong recently signed a joint statement with her counterparts in Washington, Tokyo and New Delhi expressing 'serious concerns regarding dangerous and provocative actions' by China in the East and South China Seas, and the 'abrupt constriction […] of key supply chains'.
Ms Wong has also said the government remains 'appalled' by the treatment of Australians imprisoned in China, including Dr Yang Jun, who is facing espionage charges he strongly denies.
Defence Minister Richard Marles has voiced Canberra's alarm at Beijing's 'no limits agreement' with Moscow, and claimed China has engaged in the biggest conventional military build-up since the end of World War II.
However, this assessment is contested by independent Australian analysts.
Beijing also has plenty of complaints. They include Canberra's ongoing pursuit of closer military cooperation with the US and UK through the AUKUS pact.
There is also the commitment to forcing the sale of the lease to operate the Port of Darwin that is currently held by a Chinese company.
Reliable trading partner
Mr Albanese has already made clear his visit to China will have a strong economic focus.
While grappling with security challenges, any Australian government, Labor or Coalition, must face the reality that last year, local companies sold more to China – worth $196 billion – than our next four largest markets combined.
China is also, by far, Australia's biggest supplier, putting downward pressure on the cost of living.
China is Australia's largest supplier, and the fifth largest buyer of Chinese goods globally. ( Reuters: Chalinee Thirasupa )
Research produced by Curtin University, commissioned by the Australia-China Business Council, finds trade with China increases disposable income of the average Australian household by $2,600, or 4.6 per cent per person.
In an ideal world, Australia would have a more diversified trading mix.
But again, any Australian government or business must grapple with the reality that obvious major alternative markets, like the US, are not only less interested in local goods and services, but are walking away from their past trade commitments.
Under the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement signed two decades ago, Australian exporters selling to the US faced an average tariff of just 0.1 per cent. But nowadays Washington applies a baseline tariff of 10 per cent on most Australian imports.
Meanwhile, owing to the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement struck in 2015, Beijing applies an average tariff of just 1.1 per cent.
This also explains Alabanese's response when he was asked in April if he would support Trump's trade war against China:
"It would be extraordinary if the Australian response was 'thank you' and we will help to further hurt our economy."
Likewise, Trade Minister Don Farrell is adamant Australia's interests will determine the Albanese government's choices, not 'what the Americans may or may not want'.
"We don't want to do less business with China, we want to do more business with China."
Deeper trade ties with Asia, including China, are not just about making a buck. Wong has stressed the national security implications of a strong economic relationship:
"[It is] an investment in our security. Stability and prosperity are mutually reinforcing."
All of this means Albanese's six-day visit to China is shaping up to be time well spent.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.
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