Belt and Road brings positive changes to the world
I often ask my students:
imagine your day if there were no electricity. The iPhone would
be useless; there might be difficulties getting to the university; the lecture
theatre would be plunged into darkness; there would be insufficient light to
study and no TV in the evening. At a second level, a whole range of consumer
goods, including books and newspapers, would disappear. The Belt and Road Initiative’s
(BRI) investment in electricity provision literally empowers the people whose
lives are transformed as a result.
The
second effect I would highlight is trade facilitation. In England there is a
saying ‘time is money’. The more time it takes to move goods, the more costly they
will be, and less trade will be the result. Building new infrastructure is one
way to improve the situation, but the China-Europe freight trains point to
another way to achieve the same result. By improving logistics and smoothing
customs procedures, China and its trading partners have demonstrated a less
costly way to achieve the same result.
In an interview, Jean Monnet, the father of the European Union, once said
that a civilization needs rules, and without rules that everyone accepts, you
have nothing.
Looking outside the framework of my own work, I would say that the biggest
contribution is China’s support for a rule-based international order,
especially at a time when it is under so much threat.
A book
I wrote named Revitalising the Silk Road has been well-received and is being used in university courses. I
wrote the book because, at the time, there was much speculation and debate
about the (hidden) motives behind the launch of the BRI but not much was
written about what was actually happening on the ground – the roads, railways,
ports and pipelines.
I have been working at the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS)
since July last year. The Institute itself is designed to encourage dialogue on
current issues by connecting researchers around the world. I was asked to
set-up a research project which I called the ‘New Silk Roads’ project to
embrace China’s BRI. When we announced the project to IIAS members, we received
over 700 respondents from 77 countries who wanted to work with us.
Two years ago, I was honored to be invited to the first Belt and Road
Forum for International Forum. I hope to attend the forum again this year – I
have already accepted the invitation to attend the international think-tank
that accompanies the main forum. It was impressive to see many of the
world’s leaders supporting messages of international cooperation.
Let me plead for my own little dream. I want a virtual Silk Roads museum.
It would cover the routes of the ancient Silk roads, starting with the epochs
of their greatest civilizations. The museum would include 3D views of
historical artifacts, as well as examples of poetry, drama, literature, dance
and music. It would tell of ancient societies and cultures, of the ideals that
inspired them. Let it help us rediscover the humanity that unites mankind along
the vast, endless stretch of the New Silk roads.
(Richard Griffiths is
an economic historian with the International Institute for Asian
Studies (IIAS) in the Netherlands. The article is
based on the scholar's interview with Ren Yan, People's Daily's correspondent
in Belgium.)
Belt and Road brings positive changes to the world
Reviewed by PEOPLES MAIL
on
23:18
Rating:
No comments: