Does China ‘Belt and Road’ initiative benefit Africa?
By Gerald Mbanda
The fact that the Belt and Road project was
initiated by China, but serves
development interests of other countries is a confirmation of President Xi
Jinping’s belief that the world can work together for the betterment of
humanity, with shared prosperity, and that poverty elimination is possible and
can be speeded up within developing countries. President Xi looks at the benefits of the
‘Belt and Road initiative in the lens of the Silk Road spirit of peace and cooperation,
openness and inclusiveness, mutual learning and mutual benefit, with a view to
realizing common development and prosperity and building a community of shared
future for mankind.
According to the African Economic Outlook Report (AEO, 2018),
poor infrastructure is highlighted as a key challenge to Africa’s inclusive
growth. The report mentions that the problem is created by lack of investment
in infrastructure, and Africa needs an estimate of $130–170bn annually
to overcome the problem. The building of roads, railways and waterways will increase
continental connectivity to ease import and export. The One Belt One Road
Initiative has significantly invested in improving infrastrure in Africa, for
example, in Kenya where China has invested $14billion to build a Standard Gauge
Railway (SGR) that stretches 485kms. The One Belt One Road initiative gives
developing countries an opportunity to have space in the global economy, create
jobs and guarantee prosperity.
The Belt and Road initiative creates solutions to Africa’s
continental development agenda 2063, and promotes The
China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), started in October 2000, with the aim of
strengthening cooperation between China and African countries. The Ethiopia-Djibouti
756km electric railway project enabled land-locked Ethiopia to be connected to the Mediterranean sea, hence
making it easy to promote trade and movement of people not only with Djibouti,
but also playing a significant role in continental integration and connecting to the outside world.
At the time of inaugurating the Ethiopia- Djibouti
Chinese built railway, the African |Union Advisor on Regional Integration,
Rossette Nyirinkindi observed that, the project demonstrated China’s commitment
to supporting Africa in realizing the continent's aspirations for development.
She further said that, "They (the Chinese) have demonstrated that they can
stand by us to achieve our aspirations; and especially on infrastructure, this
is a very good example of that very good cooperation."
China and Africa, have opportunities of cooperation
and have always been a community of shared
interests. According to the statistics by China
Customs, in January 2018, the import and export value of China-Africa trade
amounted to US$16.5 billion, with China’s exports to Africa amounting to US$8.31
billion, while China’s imports from
Africa stood at US$8.19 billion. China has remained Africa’s largest trading partner
for nine consecutive years as major cooperation programs that deepened bilateral
economic and trade exchanges, have been on the increase. During the FOCAC meeting that took place in December
2015, in Johannesburg, South Africa, President Xi Jinping pledged $60 billion
in form of aid and loans to the African continent.
In July 2018,
President Xi, visited Senegal, Rwanda and South Africa where he signed a number
of cooperation agreements. In Senegal, President Macky Sall, noted that, "Senegal
takes a positive view of China's role in Africa, for its contribution to peace
and stability and equally ... for the financing of budgets." During the
September 2018 Summit of the Forum on China Africa Cooperation held in Beijing, the Rwandan President Paul
Kagame, noted in his speech that, “ Africa’s
wish is to be a full and integral part of the Belt and Road Initiative”.
Kagame who also served as the African Union Chairman, further said, “China’s
engagement in Africa has been deeply transformational, both internally, and
with respect to Africa’s global position. That is why we now want to reinforce
and scale up the Forum, in order to maximize the benefits”. These statements from African leaders, is a
great testimony that China’s Belt and Road initiative is a great opportunity
for Africa’s development.
However, it is important to note that
although African countries realize the benefits of partnering with China in
promoting the “Belt and Road’’ projects, Western critics try to paint another
picture of Africa being choked with Chinese debts that could
leave African nations with no choice but to hand over controlling stakes in
strategic assets to the Chinese government, and the ‘re-colonization of
Africa”. This is not the case. The real fact is that China has challenged the
decade’s long dominance of both US and EU in Africa and the above view is meant
to bias African countries against China. African countries that struggle to pay their
loans may have problems related bad negotiations skills, bad utilization of the
loans or even high appetite for loans that may prove difficult to pay. In such
cases, the problem is not attributed to the lender. Secondly, China loans have
no strings attached unlike those given by Western financial institutions.
In a study conducted in 2016, in thirty six countries
by Afrobarometer, a Pan-African research network, an average of 63 percent of
Africans are highly impressed by China’s economic and political relationship
with Africa. Former Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade, once put it that, “China
which has fought its own battles to modernize, has a much greater sense of the
personal urgency of development in Africa than many Western nations’’.
As China prepares to host the second Belt and Road
forum in April 2019, the writing is on the wall that the initiative connects
world countries and promotes mutually beneficial projects for the improvement
of the wellbeing of world populations and achievement of sustainable
development goals.
The author is a journalist
based in Kigali, Rwanda, and is a commentator on political issues in Africa and
editor of an upcoming book on China and Rwanda.
Does China ‘Belt and Road’ initiative benefit Africa?
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