Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Yaw's avatar

I don't disagree that the Belt and Road Initiative is really a way to make Chinese GDP figures look better and receive goodwill from developing countries. While some Chinese projects may be supbar, it's a complex situation. I think it's a two sided coin. Many "Global South" leaders want quick wins without real reform to their economies and that's what China offers. It's easy for Westerners to sit back and say attack Chinese lending & projects. But African countries will continue to deal with China (as long as China is willing to lend) for three key reasons:

1) No economic conditions (like the IMF wanting devaluation, removal of fuel subsidies, or privatization of government owned firms)

2) China's non-interference policy (like the IMF or West asking for multiparty democracy or allowing elections to be fairer in conditions for loans) -- The West pushed Ivory Coast, Mozambique, Ghana, Mobutu's Congo, and other African nations to allow multiparty elections as conditions for aid in the 90s

3) Speed to build infrastructure

I'll give some examples in Africa.

1) Ethiopia: Ethiopia, as you know, has been incredibly fast growing and it's one of the few African countries that doesn't have a billion dollar mining sector or oil (Ethiopia mainly sells coffee). Ethiopia is also the 2nd largest debtor to China in Africa. China built railways that Addis Ababa needed to connect landlocked Ethiopia to Djibouti's coast line in roughly 4 years. When Ethiopia started to service its Chinese loan in 2016, Ethiopia struggled to repay so China extended loan maturities from 10 to 30 years.

https://www.africanews.com/2018/09/07/china-extends-repayment-of-ethiopia-railway-loan-to-30-years-pm//

2) Angola: https://yawboadu.substack.com/p/angola

Angola is the largest debtor to China in Africa. China provided infrastructure and loans that were collateralized with Angola's oil. Angola was obliterated by the 27 year civil war where America(and China!) backed the anti-communists while Soviet Union and the Organization of African Unity backed the communists. China wanted to win Angola's good graces so it was willing to spend in Angola to enhance good will and get cheap oil. Angola was utterly desolate in 2002 after the civil war. Angola, despite being mismanaged and horrifically corrupt, it is now a (lower) middle income country.

3) Guinea: https://yawboadu.substack.com/p/the-economics-and-geopolitics-of

Guinea recently graduated from low-income to (lower) middle income, because the previous coup leader, Alpha Conde worked with China, so China can extract more bauxite at a reduced cost. Guinea now exports more Bauxite than Australia. Now Guinea is getting new ports, highways, and roads at a fast speed (although I have heard reports from my Guinean friends that China displaces and removes peoples homes so China can build). If it were the West, there would be environmental impact assessment tests and human rights assessments, which would delay the speed of the project.

I am not saying this to refute what you are saying. In fact I agree largely, with it. I am just pointing out that none of this will stop most of Africa from borrowing from China (as long as China is willing to lend) because most African countries want the infrastructure built quickly and most of them don't like interference in their economies.

Expand full comment
David Burse's avatar

"Even Indonesia’s high-speed rail line in Jakarta, sometimes touted as the most successful Belt and Road project, had massive cost overruns and fell years behind schedule. (It also is only 88 miles long.)"

California High Speed Train: "Hold My Beer"

But seriously - very good article. I am now more informed, which is why I became a paid subscriber. I was going to pull the plug if all you are going to post is DNC campaign advertisements.

IDK when you normally post your articles, but I am in Spain, and this showed up around 11 am local time, which is 2 am in California.

Expand full comment
161 more comments...

No posts