Capitalising on Asia’s Moment in a Multipolar World

Young, educated, tech-savvy and consumption-ready populations have long been key to economic growth. What economists, business strategists and investors should note is the outsized surge in these metrics for Asia today. Calling it a “swelling middle class” may be an understatement. 90% of the increase in global middle-class consumers in recent years has been in Asia. And this cohort could grow from 2 billion to 3.5 billion in the next decade. That’s about the same as total world population growth from 2001 to today. This growth in purchasing power is poised to drive a large and long-term fourth wave of change in global economic demand.

Demographic changes are one aspect of a rapidly changing world where international investors will need to view Asia through a fresh framework that recognizes how global technological, economic, and geopolitical power is becoming increasingly decentralized, no longer concentrated in the hands of a single country or region.

To effectively position for Asia’s long-term opportunities, investors need to understand the context and the dynamics of the underlying trends in the region and how they impact the rest of the world. There are three consequential developments that investors should be watching closely.

1. The fourth wave. After three growth waves, from post-war Japan to the industrialization of the East Asian Tigers, and, more recently, China, Asia is moving away from supply chain-based economies. At a record pace, its young and growing consumer class is leveraging converging trends as digital technologies.

Moreover, with a nearly 700 million-strong population, Southeast Asia is poised to produce 140 million new young consumers, nearly a fifth of the world’s total, over the next decade. The rise of Southeast Asia’s economies converging with China’s continued economic momentum will power growth in Asia.

Southeast Asia is likewise benefiting from previous growth waves and from Chinese investment. Despite Covid-19-induced challenges, Chinese investment continues to provide a platform for upgrading critical infrastructure in the region, with the priority seemingly evolving towards more green-energy projects and technology-related investments, couched in talk of a ‘green silk road’ and ‘digital silk road’.

This ‘fourth wave’ of growth will pull the world’s economic gravity east.