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5/22/2025
Is Asia Self-sufficient in Times of Deglobalization?
Ivy-sw Ng
APAC Chief Investment Officer
Tommy Law
Institutional Product Specialist Analyst
It does not take a mastermind to notice that our world seems more uncertain than ever. One month ago, we witnessed the largest tariff increase in modern economic history on the so-called Liberation Day. The following week, the U.S. president announced a 90-day pause on tariff hikes for every country except China and escalated tariffs on China to 145%. Now, the stock market is rallying in the wake of a trade deal between the U.S. and the U.K., alongside substantial progress in U.S.-China negotiations. While the market has been on a rollercoaster ride, it is evident that global uncertainty is rising, and the level of protectionism has surged under Trump’s presidency. In a world of global protectionism, where there are no true winners, self-sufficiency has become critical for many countries to reduce vulnerability to external shocks. To assess which countries are more resilient, this article explores the self-sufficiency of Asian nations in food, energy and technology.
Australia is the only country in APAC that demonstrates a high food self-sufficiency ratio (SSR), driven by abundant resources and advanced infrastructure. Its vast arable land, large labor force, and sophisticated mechanization enable near self-sufficiency in most essential foods. As a net food exporter, Australia’s food imports, primarily non-essential processed foods, beverages, seafood, and dairy, accounted for only 2-3% of total imports from 2020 to 2022.[1] Additionally, its sophisticated downstream supply chains, featuring advanced cold chain systems, extensive bulk storage, modern processing and packaging, and efficient distribution, ensure effective food storage and transportation.
In contrast, other Asia-Pacific (APAC) countries are more trade-dependent. At the production level, developed markets such as Japan and South Korea face limited arable land, compounded by a severe shortage of agricultural labor and reliance on foreign workers. Consequently, they prioritize rice self-sufficiency while importing most cereals (e.g., wheat, corn, and soybeans), meat, vegetables, and seafood from the United States, Canada, Australia, Brazil, and China.[2]
Similarly, Southeast Asia (SEA), despite abundant land and human resources for agriculture, focuses on rice production (e.g., Thailand and Vietnam) and select agricultural products such as fruits, coffee, and rubber. The rest of their food supply relies heavily on imports. China faces similar challenges. While its grain SSR reached 95% in 2023, its overall food SSR remains around 60%, indicating significant reliance on imported soybeans, vegetable oils, and oilseeds.[3] However, China is less vulnerable than SEA countries due to its wider range of food production and massive import volumes, which provide substantial bargaining power. Moreover, with over 131 million m³ of cold storage capacity built in 2020[4], China’s downstream infrastructure is robust, though rural-urban disparities persist. Conversely, SEA faces challenges in food quality and preservation due to traditional handling and storage methods, as well as fragmented and inefficient distribution, particularly in rural areas with limited transport infrastructure. Significant investment in food processing is needed to upgrade SEA’s food supply chain.
India presents a mixed food self-sufficiency profile. As one of the world’s largest producers of grains, poultry, fish, and pulses[5], it ranks 105th out of 127 countries in the 2024 Global Hunger Index[6], indicating severe food insecurity. Poor infrastructure causes significant food waste, with inadequate cold storage leading to spoilage of perishable goods and poor rural road networks causing delays. It is estimated that about 40% of the food produced in India is wasted due to inefficiencies in the supply chain.[7] Both public and private investment is needed to address these infrastructure gaps in India.
No Asian country is fully self-sufficient in energy, with the region relying heavily on fossil fuels, which account for 82% of energy consumption on average (Figure 2). Only Australia and Indonesia, net exporters of coal and highly self-sufficient in liquefied natural gas (LNG) (Figure 1), achieve relative energy independence.[8] Other Asian countries depend on imports, including crude oil from the Middle East and Southeast Asia, petroleum products from within Asia, and renewable energy systems from China, Germany, and the United States.[9]
Several factors limit energy self-sufficiency. First, some countries lack sufficient raw material reserves. For instance, South Korea and Japan have minimal coal reserves. Second, domestic reserves often fail to meet local demand. Despite being the world’s largest coal producer, China, along with India (the second-largest) and Vietnam, imported 8–22% of their coal consumption in 2022[10], particularly high-quality coking coal for steel production. Third, refining capacity is often limited. While Thailand, India, China, Indonesia and Vietnam have proven oil reserves[11], there are gaps in their refining capacity. For example, China requires specialized infrastructure upgrades if they would like to process high-sulfur or heavy crude.[12] In Vietnam and Indonesia, refining capacity is insufficient, and facilities are not fully optimized. While investment in Southeast Asian oil refining could help, high sunk costs, anticipated oil price declines due to OPEC+ output increases, and operational challenges pose obstacles.
To reduce reliance on imported energy, Asia-Pacific (APAC) countries are investing in energy transitions to renewables and nuclear power. This has proven to be challenging even for countries like Australia and Indonesia that seem to be more self-reliant at the moment. Australia’s net-zero target by 2050 requires accelerated renewable energy adoption, as renewable energy accounted for only 12.32% of Australian final energy consumption in 2021, ranking 10th in APAC[13]. Substantial investment is needed to meet interim 2030 and 2050 targets. Similarly, Indonesia, with nearly 40% coal reliance (Figure 2), may face increasing renewable energy demand as its economy grows. These challenges affect all APAC countries. While shifting to renewables be an answer to achieve greater energy self-sufficiency, securing sufficient investment for energy transition remains a key obstacle.
Chart 1: Net Export of Energy by Selected APAC Countries 2021-22 | Chart 2: Energy Mix by Selected APAC Countries 2022 – 2023 |
Source: IRENA, 2024 | Source: International Energy Agency, 2025 |
Long-term readers may recall our previous CIO View on the semiconductor supply chain. In that article, we highlighted APAC's criti-cal role in the global semiconductor supply chain. Silicon wafers, the raw material for chips, and semiconductor manufacturing equipment are produced in Japan. Leading fabless companies in the U.S. design chips, including central processing units and graphics processing units, and send these designs to top foundries in Taiwan for production. The chips are then assembled and tested in Taiwan or China. South Korea specializes in memory production. This illustrates a high degree of division of labor within Asia, with each country relying on the others.
Chart 3: Mapping the Semiconductor Supply Chain in Asia | Chart 4: Technology Roadmap of Leading Global Foundry vs. Leading Chinese Foundry |
Source: DWS Investment GmbH, as of September 6, 2024. | Source: TSMC and SMIC website, as of May 2025. |
With the rapid development of artificial intelligence, technological self-sufficiency has become more critical than ever. In 2014, China established that China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund to provide state-backed capital for its semiconductor industry, aiming for self-sufficiency. As a result, numerous semiconductor companies have emerged or expanded in China across various segments of the value chain, from upstream fabless companies designing central processing units (CPUs) and graphics processing units (GPUs) to downstream foundries and outsourced semiconductor assembly and testing (OSAT) providers. While China has made significant progress in CPU and GPU design capabilities, the technological gap in other parts of the supply chain appears to be widening. For example, the technology node gap between China's leading foundry and the world's top foundry has increased from four years in 2022 to five years in 2025. Similarly, China's leading memory integrated device manufacturer (IDM) only began mass production of high-bandwidth memory 2 (HBM2) last year, a milestone South Korean IDMs achieved a decade ago.
The success of leading technology companies stems not only from superior manufacturing capabilities but also from the robust ecosystems built around their offerings. For example, Nvidia's proprietary CUDA programming interface enables developers to program GPUs to accelerate applications, allowing Nvidia chips to outperform competing architectures, even when competitor chips offer higher floating-point operations per second (FLOPS). Any attempt to achieve technological self-sufficiency must be supported by a sufficiently large ecosystem, which represents a significant barrier for any company to overcome.
Hence it is unsurprising that the market share of the leaders in the global technology supply chain has been increasing over time, and the consolidation is expected to continue. The global technology supply chain has become highly specialized across different countries after years of globalization. No single country dominates the entire supply chain, and thus, no nation is truly self-sufficient. While efforts to achieve self sufficiency on critical technology could present interesting investment themes in some countries, these efforts would require significant time to materialize and become competitive in the global market.
Chart 5: Global Foundry Industry Market Share 2020 – 2024 | Chart 6: Global Foundry Market Share 2020 – 2024 |
Source: Counter Point, as of December 31, 2024. | Source: TrendForce, as of December 31, 2024 |
Decades of globalization have deeply integrated the supply chains of Asian countries across food, energy, technology and defense sectors. Apart from China, which prioritizes self-sufficiency very early on due to national security concerns, other nations are often better off integrating with the global supply as achieving full self-reliance is often unattainable due to resources constraints. Having said that, some countries have achieved self-sufficiency partially in selected areas. For instance, Australia has attained a high extent of self-sufficiency in food and energy through the corresponding supply chain, and China has gathered its efforts in completing its technological self-sufficiency. Given heightening uncertainty in the global tensions, more countries may try to reduce its external dependence, possibly prompting the market to interesting investment themes such as food processing in Southeast Asia, renewable capacity in Australia and semi-conductors in China.
Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2022
Ministry of Food and Rural Affairs and Ministry of Finance, 2024
ARMS, October 2024
JARN, February 2022
Food and Agricultural Organization, 2024
Global Hunger Index, 2024.
FAO and Ministry of Food Processing Industries, 2022
Australian Bureau of Statistics and Indonesian Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM), 2024
Australian Bureau of Statistics and Indonesian Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM), 2024
World’s Top Exports and IEA, 2024
U.S. Energy Information Administration, 2023
S&P Global, 2023
IEA, 2025
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R-070495-4 (7/25)