Specialty risk consultancy Control Risks expects 2017 to be a year of acute uncertainty for corporates and jotted down top five risks for businesses in the Asia Pacific region.
Besides "end of globalisation, at least as Asia Pacific knows it", the other four major risks facing the region include territorial tensions, populism and performance legitimacy, China's regulatory whiplash and the implications of the fragmentation of IS in Iraq and Syria.
The report has assigned a 'medium' political risk to India. The political risk rating evaluates the likelihood of state or non-state political actors negatively affecting business operations in a country.
Regarding the "end of globalisation", the report said "the backlash in Asia Pacific's two biggest markets (Europe and the US) against globalisation is the greatest threat to this region's overall economic and political security over the next decade, never mind the next year".
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On territorial issues, the report said tensions in the South China Sea may actually decline, provided China does not seek to flaunt its territorial expansion, but divisions within ASEAN are likely to increase.
The report said while China slowdown and Western protectionism will increasingly 'bite' in Asia, elites in the region will shore up their legitimacy through populism.
"In India, the Modi government will intersperse hard choices with appeals to Hindu nationalism," it said.
Moreover, since China is tightening its regulatory regime, both Chinese and foreign businesses in the country are going to feel "considerable strain" in 2017.
"... Relative to the havoc caused by terrorism in the Middle East and Europe, Asia's terrorism risk landscape has been considerably more benign - and will continue to remain comparatively so," it said.
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