|
|
|
Chinese BRI: A success or a failure?
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
|
|
|
|
Asad Mirza (Source: IANS) | 17 Sep, 2022
The recent economic upheaval followed by the political disruption in Sri
Lanka, has once again made China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) the
focus of debate whether it is beneficial or insensitive to the
participating countries besides being a success or a failure.
Chinese
President Xi Jinping launched the BRI with much fanfare and high
promises and grandiose plans for the participating countries in 2013. It
was considered to be a centrepiece of the Chinese foreign and trade
policy.
Basically, the BRI earlier also referred to, as One Belt
One Road or OBOR for short, is a global infrastructure development
strategy to invest in nearly 150 countries and international
organisations, around the globe.
The BRI formed a central
component of Xi's "Major Country Diplomacy" strategy, which calls for
China to assume a greater leadership role for global affairs in
accordance with its rising power and status.
As of August, 149 countries were listed as having signed up to the BRI.
Xi
originally announced the strategy as the "Silk Road Economic Belt"
during an official visit to Kazakhstan in September 2013, referring to
the proposed overland routes for road and rail transportation through
landlocked Central Asia along the famed historical trade routes of the
Western Regions; in addition to the "21st Century Maritime Silk Road",
referring to the Indo-Pacific sea routes through Southeast Asia to South
Asia, the Middle East and Africa.
In fact the BRI was also considered a grandiose plan to challenge the American hegemony over the global trade and diplomacy.
However,
the recent events in Sri Lanka, with similar echoes being heard from
Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan has led some China watchers to conclude
that this is an indicator of the hit that the Chinese economy has taken
during the Covid pandemic and the BRI appears to be under revaluation
with recipient countries wary of the debt trap and its economic
feasibility.
Let's take a closer look at the original intent of
the BRI, its expansion and its long and short-term impacts on the aid
recipient countries and whether it has been a success or a failure and
how the US could have countered it in a much better manner.
In
his report in 2020, Rafiq Dossani, Director, RAND Centre for Asia
Pacific Policy, opined that China's strongest motive behind the BRI was
its long-term economic security. The maritime routes of the BRI would
have helped the relatively underdeveloped, landlocked areas of China
such as Yunnan and Xinjiang provinces by linking them with ports in the
more rapidly growing areas of Asia.
At the same time, the
emerging land routes of the BRI were marked as an alternative to the
South China Sea, through which most of China's trade currently passes
and which is becoming a zone of contestation between the US and China.
Dossani
further explaining the reasons for the initial welcome of BRI opined
that traditionally, many countries prefer to work with the World Bank
and other multilateral lenders, which provide borrowers with good
practices, while making significant funding available on a meritocratic
rather than political basis.
But, he says further that from a
developing country's viewpoint, accessing the world's spare capital has
been difficult because of the risk entailed in many such investments.
The Asian Development Bank estimates that Asian countries face an
infrastructure investment gap of $459 billion a year.
This logic
also explains the sentiments, which in the initial stages of the launch
of the BRI seemed to be the main attractive reason for the BRI projects
and Chinese funding. But nine years after its launch BRI seems to have
lost its sheen, due to the economic meltdown in several countries, which
borrowed heavily from China under the garb of infrastructure
development, progress and prosperity.
Bangladesh Finance Minster
AHM Mustafa Kamal has publicly blamed economically unviable Chinese BRI
projects for exacerbating economic crisis in Sri Lanka. He says that
developing countries must think twice about taking more loans through
BRI as global inflation and slowing growth add to the strains on
indebted emerging markets.
In fact Bangladesh has made it clear
that it will not accept any further loans but only grants from Beijing.
Nepal has also taken the same stand. Pakistan with some $53 billion
being spent by Beijing under the aegis of BRI also faces the same fate.
China
has also invested some $44 billion in Indonesia, $41 billion in
Singapore, $39 billion in Russia, $33 billion in Saudi Arabia and $30
billion in Malaysia.
The cry against Chinese BRI is not limited
only to Indian sub-continent as its reverberations can be heard in the
stalled $4.7 billion railway project in Kenya, also. Five years since
its launch, the project ends abruptly in an empty field, 200 miles from
its destination in Uganda.
As conflicts between the United
States and China appear to mount, some experts have questioned the
intentions of China's BRI. It has been viewed as a debt trap for
impoverished states and a means for China to expand its territorial
control, but is it a reality? Is the US missing an opportunity to
participate-in or initiate parallel activities?
BRI has been
repeatedly labelled a debt trap and a power grab, and perhaps this
seemed like a possible scenario. However, this concept has been debunked
by recent research. Deborah Brautigam, director of the China Africa
Research Initiative at Johns Hopkins University, found no evidence that
Chinese banks over-lend or invest in loss-making projects to obtain a
foothold in those countries, in one of her studies on Chinese lending to
Africa.
There is further evidence that China is not engaging in
debt trap diplomacy. Brautigam has noted that in some countries the IMF
has been labelled as being vulnerable. Also Chinese loans were not
responsible for pushing indebted countries above IMF debt sustainability
limits.
Furthermore, it should be noted that not just
impoverished nations, but East Asian and Europe countries have also been
smitten by the BRI. Over 18 European Union countries have joined the
BRI.
In fact, rather than decrying China, the US should engage
in infrastructure lending to poor countries, and/or make it easier for
multilateral banks to lend for such projects, reducing bureaucratic
requirements. It should also initiate similar activities in
under-developed or developing countries.
To better its image,
China should improve transparency around BRI deals. The World Bank and
other bodies have also called for increased transparency. This would go a
long way in improving US and other countries' understanding of Chinese
intentions about the BRI.
(Asad Mirza is a political commentator
based in New Delhi. He writes on Indian Muslims, educational,
international affairs, interfaith and current affairs)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
|
|
Daily Poll |
|
|
Will the new MSME credit assessment model simplify financing? |
|
|
|
|
|
Commented Stories |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|