Yantian Harbor, Yantian District, Shenzhen, China 鈥 CHENGWEI HU-UNSPLASH

TRADE DISRUPTIONS from China鈥檚 lockdowns and the war in Ukraine are seen doing for Southeast Asia what the US鈥 spat with Beijing couldn鈥檛 meaningfully do 鈥 redistribute supply chains.

鈥淢uch of the discussion around dependency on China has been linked to the US-China rivalry,鈥 according to a report by Hinrich Foundation. But the latest 鈥渄isruptions have broadened the number of countries currently assessing the risks to their supplies.鈥

This time around, Japan and European Union (EU) members are looking to secure supply linkages without increasing cost, wrote Stewart Paterson, the report鈥檚 author and research fellow at the Asia-based foundation set up by US entrepreneur Merle Hinrich to promote sustainable global trade.

The EU and Japan each account for about 12% of total direct investment flows into Southeast Asia for the past five years, compared with China鈥檚 8% share, according to the report. With a per capita gross domestic product (GDP) of $4,500, the 10-member bloc of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is also a 鈥渇ar less costly source of labor than China,鈥 Mr. Paterson wrote.

Another reason that sets apart the US-led efforts earlier to reduce dependence on China from what鈥檚 happening now is the relation between the state and the companies, he said. Unlike in the US where multinational corporations are 鈥渘otoriously independent鈥 from government-set agendas, the linkages run much deeper in the EU and Japan.

鈥淭he passing of Japan鈥檚 new Economic Security Law and the EU鈥檚 Global Gateway policy are the most recent manifestations of close government-corporate cooperation in industrial policy,鈥 Mr. Paterson said.

Here are some more key points from the report:

ASEAN鈥檚 export performance between 2016 and 2020 has more or less matched that of China. The bloc鈥檚 exports grew by 21% to $1.39 trillion during the period, while China鈥檚 grew by 23% to $2.59 trillion.

The ASEAN bloc has been enmeshed in the global trading system and has trade-to-GDP ratios well above the global average.

Currently, much of the growth in ASEAN trade has been with China itself. The bloc鈥檚 exports to China grew by 51% between in the four years to 2020, while exports to the rest of the world grew by 16%. 鈥 Bloomberg