1.8K Views· 25 June 2025
From Soviet to Strategy: How China’s Five-Year Plans Now Inspire Russia’s 2050 Vision
In a fascinating geopolitical reversal, Russia is now drawing lessons from China’s long-standing Five-Year Plans as it begins laying out a development roadmap toward 2050. Once a model for China’s own industrialisation, the Soviet Union’s planning system has come full circle — now inspiring modern Russia to adopt China's blend of state-driven strategy, innovation, and global positioning.
For New Zealand foreign policy experts, economists, and Asia-Pacific analysts, this development marks a crucial shift in how major powers are structuring their futures — with significant implications for trade, diplomacy, and regional security in the years ahead.
As New Zealand maintains complex relationships with both China and Russia, understanding this evolving dynamic is key. China’s Five-Year Plans have long influenced its global rise, infrastructure dominance, and Belt and Road strategy — themes increasingly relevant for Kiwi exporters, political scientists, and global investors.
Russia’s interest in similar long-term strategic planning suggests an intent to redefine its economic identity, rebuild influence, and potentially reshape its engagement with the Indo-Pacific — including countries like New Zealand that balance between Western alliances and Asian economic integration.
This analysis is essential for those in New Zealand’s public sector, academia, defence, and business, offering insight into how Eurasian power realignments could shape our own strategic decisions moving forward.
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