Asian AngleWhere Southeast Asians really want to live, work and travel
While Thailand leads for tourism, Singapore and Japan are the top draws for work, revealing uneven regional soft power dynamics

Soft power, a term coined by American political scientist Joseph Nye in 1990, is widely understood in international relations as a fundamental aspect of a country’s attractiveness, alongside its military and economic might, or “hard power”.
Nye defined soft power as the “ability to obtain preferred outcomes by attraction rather than coercion or payment”. Varying definitions and measures of this concept now exist, as evident in global indices, with the main pillars being a country’s culture, political values and foreign policy. How attractive a country is as “a place to invest, trade, work, study or visit” is key. In Southeast Asia, these latter aspects of soft power are now woven into the region’s flourishing “creative economy”, even as certain inadequacies of national and regional infrastructure remain.
Many respondents named an Asean member state as their most preferred country to live or work in, ranking first among respondents from Malaysia (32 per cent), Brunei (28.4 per cent), Singapore (23.2 per cent) and Vietnam (17.9 per cent). Japan ranked first for respondents from Indonesia (25 per cent), the Philippines (23.7 per cent), Thailand (22.8 per cent) and Myanmar (17.5 per cent). Across the region as a whole, an Asean member was the leading choice (19 per cent), with Japan a close second (16.8 per cent).