Asians see the United States losing its undisputed international influence in
50 years to possibly China amid waning trust in Washington to act responsibly in
the world, a poll showed.
The study is carried out by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs (CCGA), an
independent US think tank.
In the immediate term, US power in the eyes of Asians remains secure.
US influence today is "substantially above any other country" even as others
have gained clout, and Asians do not predict much of decline in US influence
over the next decade, according to the survey in partnership with US-based Asia
Society.
In half a century, however, a majority in all countries covered by the poll
-- China, India, South Korea and the United States -- believed "another nation"
will become as powerful or surpass the United States in power.
"There is a clear agreement across the board that over the next half century
Asians see the United States no more the sole superpower that it is or
considered to be today," CCGA president Marshall Bouton told a news conference
in Washington.
The survey did not specify in its questions which nation people believe will
match or overtake the United States.
"We can only infer what nation people had in mind when they answered that
question," Bouton said. When asked whether it was China, he said "I guess so."
China has become a global manufacturing power and is already displacing the
United States as the primary trading partner for many nations.
China has also amassed the world's largest trade surplus and world's largest
foreign exchange reserves. Its current account surplus has already surpassed
that of Japan, the world's second richest economy after the United States.
The poll also found Asians, including the Chinese, still wanting the United
States to remain engaged in the region though they express low trust in the
United States to act responsibly.
Trust in the United States to act responsibly in the world is "low,"
according to the poll.