The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia Vancouver campus
Pacific Affairs
  • Issues
    • Current Issue
    • Forthcoming Issue
    • Back Issues
  • Subscriptions
    • Subscribe
    • Policies
    • Publication Dates
  • Submissions
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Policies
    • Submit
  • News
  • About
    • People
    • The Holland Prize
    • Contact
  • Support
    • Advertise
    • Donate
    • Recommend
  • Cart
    shopping_cart

Issues

Current Issue
Forthcoming Issue
Back Issues
Articles
Volume 98 – No. 1

Economic Coercion and Grey Zone Competition: Reassessing the China-Australia Case

Naoise McDonagh

Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, Australia

Sascha-Dominik Dov Bachmann

University of Canberra, Canberra, Australia

Keywords: economic coercion, economic security, geoeconomics, hybrid warfare, international trade

DOI: 10.5509/2025981-art5


  • English Abstract
  • Chinese Abstract
English Abstract
OpenClose

Economic coercion is recognized as a major policy challenge for global leaders. The case of Beijing’s use of economic coercion against Australia (2020–2024) in response to bilateral tensions holds important insights. Research shows that China’s coercion efforts failed in two ways: the total costs to Australia’s economy were smaller than expected, and Canberra did not change pre-existing policies that triggered the coercion. Failure in this case is attributed to the ability of markets to adjust. Building on this research, we argue that while markets adapted relatively well in the Australia-China case, coercion still produced significant and concentrated subnational costs that differentially impacted Australian state economies. This resulted in political pressure and destabilization effects on Australian federal politics, influencing the provision of concessions favourable to Beijing during bilateral negotiations to restore trade relations. Informed by a novel geoeconomic and hybrid warfare framework, this article therefore offers new insights on the political effects of economic coercion in democracies. Our findings suggest that weaponization of trade can serve as an effective geoeconomic strategy for grey zone/hybrid warfare.

Chinese Abstract
OpenClose

经济胁迫与灰色地带竞争:重新评估中澳案例

关键词: 经济胁迫、经济安全、地缘经济学、混合战争、国际贸易

经济胁迫被认为是全球领导人面临的一项重大政策挑战。北京为应对双边紧张局势而对澳大利亚使用经济胁迫(2020-2024)的案例具有重要的启示。研究表明,中国的胁迫尝试在两个方面失败了:对澳大利亚经济带来的总体代价低于预期,而堪培拉也没有改变先前存在的引发中国胁迫的政策。胁迫失败归因于市场的调整能力。在这项研究的基础上,我们认为,虽然市场在澳中案例中适应得相对较好,但胁迫仍然产生了巨大且集中的地方成本,对澳大利亚各州经济产生了不同的影响。这给澳大利亚联邦政治带来了政治压力和不稳定影响,影响了在恢复贸易关系的双边谈判中对北京有利的让步。因此,本文以新颖的地缘经济和混合战争的框架为基础,为经济胁迫对民主国家的政治影响提供了新的见解。我们的研究发现表明,贸易武器化可以作为灰色地带/混合战争的有效地缘经济战略。

Read article on IngentaConnect (requires institutional subscription)
Purchase Article through Pacific Affairs
  • Complete the form below to submit a purchase request. After entering "Submit," you will be taken to UBC's ePayments system. A PDF copy will be sent in 2-3 business days.
  • Outside Canada prices are in US dollars. Conversion to Canadian dollars will be applied automatically.
  • $0.00
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Purchase Article through Pacific Affairs
  • Complete the form below to submit a purchase request. After entering "Submit," you will be taken to UBC's ePayments system. A PDF copy will be sent in 2-3 business days.
  • Outside Canada prices are in US dollars. Conversion to Canadian dollars will be applied automatically.
  • $0.00
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Purchase Article through Pacific Affairs
  • Complete the form below to submit a purchase request. After entering "Submit," you will be taken to UBC's ePayments system. A PDF copy will be sent in 2-3 business days.
  • Outside Canada prices are in US dollars. Conversion to Canadian dollars will be applied automatically.
  • $0.00
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Pacific Affairs

An International Review of Asia and the Pacific

School of Public Policy and Global Affairs

Contact Us

We acknowledge that the UBC Vancouver campus is situated on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam).

Pacific Affairs
Vancouver Campus
376-1855 West Mall
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z2
Tel 604 822 6508
Fax 604 822 9452
Find us on
  
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility