Leaders | From Asia to Asia

What Asia’s economic revolution means for the world

Links between the region’s countries are getting stronger. But America’s loss is not entirely China’s gain

Image: Seb Agresti

The phrase “factory Asia” describes one of history’s most impressive economic achievements. Over the past half-century Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and, more recently, China became bustling hubs for manufacturing goods, which they then exported to the rest of the world, especially the well-off West. Millions of Asians escaped poverty by making stuff; many grew prosperous. Now the region’s economic model is shifting again, with consequences for Asia and for the world.

Asia’s long manufacturing boom fostered a wave of trade integration. In 1990, 46% of Asian trade took place within the region. By 2021 that figure had risen to 58%, making it the most integrated continent after Europe. As Asia has become richer and its firms more muscular, investment flows are becoming more regional, too.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Investing in the neighbourhood”

Investing in the neighbourhood: Asia’s new model of regional integration

From the September 23rd 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Leaders

Hacking phones is too easy. Time to make it harder

Regulators have avoided the problem for too long

The war-crimes case against the leaders of Israel and Hamas is flawed

Politics and diplomacy, not courts, are the key to ending violence and starting two-state talks


What India’s clout in white-collar work means for the world

In time its tech firms could be as formidable as China’s manufacturers