With Jonathan Pearlman

Australian Foreign Affairs Annual Index – 2019 Edition

Days Scott Morrison spent in the United States in 2019: 8

Days he spent in Indonesia: 2

Days he spent in Vanuatu: 2

Days he spent in China: 0

Days he spent in India: 0

Number of people in Australia who speak Mandarin at home: 596,711

Number of fluent Mandarin speakers in Australia who are not of Chinese ancestry: 130

Cost of Australia’s twelve new submarines when announced in 2016: A$50 billion

Estimated cost as of November 2019: A$80 billion

Total cost of six Collins-class submarines: A$5.1 billion

Proposed cost when the program was announced in 1987: A$2.8 billion

Number of times “foreign interference” appears in the 2003 Foreign Policy White Paper: 0

Number of times “foreign interference” appears in the 2017 Foreign Policy White Paper: 9

Number of times “United Kingdom” appears in the 2003 Foreign Policy White Paper: 43

Number of times “United Kingdom” appears in the 2017 Foreign Policy White Paper: 10

Number of countries that recognise Taiwan rather than China: 15

Number of these that are located in the Pacific: 4

Amount that Solomon Islands politicians were allegedly offered by China to switch from recognising Taiwan: SBD$1 million

Number of days after Solomon Islands switched to China that Kiribati switched: 4

Year in which high-speed rail was first proposed for Australia: 1981

Number of very fast trains built in China since 1981: 2800

Kilometres of high-speed rail track built in China since 1981: 29,000 kilometres

Population of Palau: 21,265

Planned date of Australian embassy opening in Palau: 2021

Flight time (including stopovers) from Canberra to Palau: 20–30 hours

Date of deal to hold a referendum in Bougainville: 30 August 2001

Date of referendum: 23 November 2019

Percentage of people in Bougainville who voted for independence: 98 per cent

Percentage of people in Australia who support a republic: 48 per cent

Poverty rate in Pakistan: 24 per cent

Amount by which Australian aid to Pakistan fell last year: A$20 million

Number of aircraft carriers operated by the United States: 24

Number of aircraft carriers operated by the rest of the world: 24

GDP per capita in mainland China: US$7,755

GDP per capita in Hong Kong: US$38,785

Number of years before China gains full control of Hong Kong: 28

Length of the current protests in Hong Kong: 192 days



Researcher: Lachlan McIntosh

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SIGNING OFF

All the best for 2020

Dear reader,

This is our last AFA Weekly for the year. We’ll return on Wednesday, 22 January 2020. Thank you for joining us each week. It has been a pleasure bringing you the latest developments and ideas from around Australia and the world, and presenting insights that – we hope – help to make sense of the breathless news cycle.

We began the second year of AFA Weekly discussing Scott Morrison’s visit to Vanuatu and Fiji – marking the start of his Pacific “step-up” – and went on to cover the escalating protests in Hong Kong, the changing nature of Australia’s US alliance, and China’s growing influence in the region and its increasing authoritarianism at home.

Other events and themes that shaped Australia’s world in 2019: Jokowi’s election win in Indonesia, Bougainville’s independence referendum, the US–China trade war and Morrison’s visit to Washington. This was the year in which a visiting US secretary of state, asked about Australia being caught between the US and China, said: “Look, you can sell your soul for a pile of soybeans, or you can protect your people ... We think it’s possible to achieve both.” We’ll see.

Next year, we will watch closely as Taiwan votes, the United States votes, and New Zealand votes. Morrison will visit India (but awaits an invitation to Beijing), Boris Johnson will try to get Brexit done, and the Hong Kong protests will, it seems, continue

This year we also launched Next Voices, an opportunity to discover Australia’s newest and best foreign-policy commentators. After receiving submissions from around the world, we published nine compelling, insightful essays. I encourage you to read them. Congratulations again to all the winners and finalists. Thankfully, we can report that foreign-policy writing in Australia has an exciting future.

I look forward to keeping an eye on 2020. Please keep the feedback coming – and if you enjoy AFA Weekly, please share it with others who might enjoy it too.

All the best for the festive season. Happy new year.

Jonathan Pearlman, Editor