China’s debt-trap diplomacy

Last Published: Fri, Jan 27 2017. 12 31 AM IST
Countries that are not yet ensnared in China’s debt trap should take note—and take whatever steps they can to avoid it

Brahma Chellaney
http://www.livemint.com/rf/Image-621x414/LiveMint/Period2/2017/01/27/Photos/Opinion/[email protected]
China is taking steps to ensure that countries will not be able to escape their debts. Photo: Reuters

If there is one thing at which China’s leaders truly excel, it is the use of economic tools to advance their country’s geostrategic interests. Through its $1 trillion “One Belt, One Road” initiative, China is supporting infrastructure projects in strategically located developing countries, often by extending huge loans to their governments. As a result, countries are becoming ensnared in a debt trap that leaves them vulnerable to China’s influence.

Of course, extending loans for infrastructure projects is not inherently bad. But the projects that China is supporting are often intended not to support the local economy, but to facilitate Chinese access to natural resources, or to open the market for low-cost and shoddy Chinese goods. In many cases, China even sends its own construction workers, minimizing the number of local jobs that are created.

Several of the projects that have been completed are now bleeding money. For example, Sri Lanka’s Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport, which opened in 2013 near Hambantota, has been dubbed the world’s emptiest. Likewise, Hambantota’s Magampura Mahinda Rajapaksa Port remains largely idle, as does the multibillion-dollar Gwadar port in Pakistan. For China, however, these projects are operating exactly as needed: Chinese attack submarines have twice docked at Sri Lankan ports, and two Chinese warships were recently pressed into service for Gwadar port security.

In a sense, it is even better for China that the projects don’t do well. After all, the heavier the debt burden on smaller countries, the greater China’s own leverage becomes.

Moreover, some countries, overwhelmed by their debts to China, are being forced to sell to it stakes in Chinese-financed projects or hand over their management to Chinese state-owned firms. In financially risky countries, China now demands majority ownership up front. For example, China clinched a deal with Nepal this month to build another largely Chinese-owned dam there, with its state-run China Three Gorges Corporation taking a 75% stake.

As if that were not enough, China is taking steps to ensure that countries will not be able to escape their debts. In exchange for rescheduling repayment, China is requiring countries to award it contracts for additional projects, thereby making their debt crises interminable. Last October, China cancelled $90 million of Cambodia’s debt, only to secure major new contracts.

Some developing economies are regretting their decision to accept Chinese loans. Protests have erupted over widespread joblessness, purportedly caused by Chinese dumping of goods, which is killing off local manufacturing, and exacerbated by China’s import of workers for its own projects.

New governments in several countries, from Nigeria to Sri Lanka, have ordered investigations into alleged Chinese bribery of the previous leadership.

In retrospect, China’s designs might seem obvious. But the decision by many developing countries to accept Chinese loans was, in many ways, understandable. Neglected by institutional investors, they had major unmet infrastructure needs. So when China showed up, promising benevolent investment and easy credit, they were all in. It became clear only later that China’s real objectives were commercial penetration and strategic leverage; by then, it was too late, and countries were trapped in a vicious cycle.

Sri Lanka is Exhibit A. Though small, the country is strategically located between China’s eastern ports and the Mediterranean. Chinese President Xi Jinping has called it vital to the completion of the maritime Silk Road.

China began investing heavily in Sri Lanka during the quasi-autocratic nine-year rule of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, and China shielded Rajapaksa at the UN from allegations of war crimes. China quickly became Sri Lanka’s leading investor and lender, and its second-largest trading partner, giving it substantial diplomatic leverage.

It was smooth sailing for China, until Rajapaksa was unexpectedly defeated in the early 2015 election by Maithripala Sirisena, who had campaigned on the promise to extricate Sri Lanka from the Chinese debt trap. True to his word, he suspended work on major Chinese projects.

But it was too late: Sri Lanka’s government was already on the brink of default. So, as a Chinese state mouthpiece crowed, Sri Lanka had no choice but “to turn around and embrace China again”. Sirisena, in need of more time to repay old loans, as well as fresh credit, acquiesced to a series of Chinese demands, restarting suspended initiatives, like the $1.4 billion Colombo Port City, and awarding China new projects.

Sirisena also recently agreed to sell an 80% stake in the Hambantota port to China for about $1.1 billion. Now, Rajapaksa is accusing Sirisena of granting China undue concessions.

By integrating its foreign, economic, and security policies, China is advancing its goal of fashioning a hegemonic sphere of trade, communication, transportation, and security links. If states are saddled with onerous levels of debt as a result, their financial woes only aid China’s neocolonial designs. Countries that are not yet ensnared in China’s debt trap should take note—and take whatever steps they can to avoid it.

©2017/PROJECT SYNDICATE

[I]Brahma Chellaney is professor of strategic studies at the New Delhi-based Centre for Policy Research and fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin.

Source
http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/21P46wlPXj00K8VUKMu9oN/Chinas-debttrap-diplomacy.html

This was posted as a comment on Buyer Beware after Njeru posted the following (Najua ilipostiwa hapa but move along kama utaanza ufala)…

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I take note. :D:D

By the way, I might be in Guangzhou in a fortnight.

Say hi to the chinks.

Tuchinku tunatajirisha watu, ukweli!

Ningoje apologists ama huwa hawacomment kwa thread zako?

:D:D:D
Nafunga siku na kachupa nimezawadiwa mchana. Wacha nipeleke vitu mossmoss.

i have lived through western and chinese aid diplomacy and i don’t see how much good IMF/World Bank did for us in spite of their patronizing dictation, shifting goalposts and threats of sanctions…

hehehe. When you incur debt, you become a slave of the creditor. We have options of choosing whether to be slaves of World Bank, IMF, EU, US or China… either way we’ll still be enslaved by debts.

is US a neocolonial client of China

We lived through western diplomacy and ended up much poorer with declining economies, highly indebted to the west, and in recession with nothing to show for that debt!!! :eek::eek::eek::eek:
With the chinese, our economy is growing, we have a growing middle class, and we have lots of infrastructure to show for that debt
Give me the chinese any day!!!:D:D:D

Chinkus are here to stay. Tupende tusipende, the important part is what the loans are used for and managed. Hapo ndio kizungumkuti kipo…eeer, I mean, Kichinkumkuti…

Why is it that always, for your average brain, when you mention the disadvantages of Chinese debt, then the only consolation is to compare it with the Western debt? Can we appreciate the dangers of Chinese debt and start looking for options that are not necessarily from either of the two culprits? Because obviously, China and the West are imbiliss in their own ways… Why does it always have to boil down to a China-West comparison? Yani we cannot think past such conundrum? Mwafrika na ukumbaff wanaendana pamoja. Kibaki weaned the country off heavy dependence on foreign debt, and here we are, none of us the younger generation can think past debt. Na mkiambiwa hiyo youth yenu imajaza utoto mnaona ni kutusiwa mnatusiwa! Sitaki kuambukizwa ujinga, wacha nijikate.
#peace.

Izi loan ni chakula cha hasora tu. Tunalipia msee kujibonda na io doh

What is the alternative? Maghufuli amezunguka akitafuta watu Wa kufund SGR yake amekosa after kukataa offer ya Wachina. Hata alienda kuomba SA akapata Zuma ako Na mashida zaidi.

and Kibaki did not wean the country off foreign debt, it is Aid maybe, in fact Kibaki started this Chinese love affair.

Shida si mshaina. Shida ni wale wezi wanatuongoza calling themselves our leaders

Either way we are fckued, nobody helps poor third world countries without wanting something back in return. Chinese debt ni mbaya, Western aid comes attached with neocolonial pressures. We need to empower ourselves the way the far East countries did last century. From my unlearned perspective, the lesser evil is the Chinese route.

you will come back with very dirty eyes.
hapo hakunanga haga za kusafisha macho.

http://www.chinahush.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/12.jpg

Mugufuli give corrupt chinaman middle finger my fren.

Magufuli gonna build SGR Tanzania 200 km at a time and to electric standards.

Right now he is actually focused on maximizing the potential of Tanzania mineral economy. This has infuriated western exploiters and their apologists who are already whining of bad business environment (curtailed space for theft of African mineral resources).

last year

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