The Belt and Road Initiative and Latin America
By Carlos
Aquino
It is
already six years since Chinese President Xi Jinping announced the Belt and Road Initiative, also known
as the BRI. Up to now, many countries in the world have joined BRI and signed
memorandums of understanding (MOUs), 18 of which are in Latin America and the
Caribbean.
At
first, the Belt and Road Initiative
aimed to reconstruct the old Silk Road that connected Asia and Europe more than
2,000 years ago. The idea was to revive the ancient land link. Later, an
initiative for the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road was also added, to connect
China with South Asia and Africa through the maritime route that was used
through a large part of the last centuries.
The
legendary travels of Chinese Admiral Zheng He during the first two decades of
the 15th century, connecting China with South Asia and Africa, in ships bigger
than the caravels of Christopher Columbus, also inspired the idea of the 21st
Century Maritime Silk Road.
Besides,
we have to remember that from the second half of the 16th century to the first
decade of the 19th century, the Manila Galleons trade connected the Latin
American colonies of Spain with China and the rest of Asia. So, an eastern
Maritime Silk Road also previously existed.
The
reconstruction of the infrastructure to move goods and people across
continents, Asia to Europe, Asia to Africa, and Asia to Latin America, is much
needed. Trade and investment, which are made easier and cheaper by better
connectivity, are the engines that create economic growth and the improvement
of people’s standard of living possible. In this sense, President Xi Jinping’s
idea is a good one.
Many
countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America are in need of investment in
infrastructure to improve their connectivity. However, many countries in these
regions cannot afford to invest in the construction of that infrastructure
themselves. In this sense, China offers to help by granting loans to construct
the infrastructure required, and it is very much appreciated. Furthermore,
companies in China have developed the technology needed to construct
large-scale infrastructural projects such as seaports, airports, roads,
railways, but also power lines, hydroelectric, and nuclear stations. They can
complete such projects at lower costs than companies from the developed world,
for example.
So, when
China announced the Belt and Road
Initiative, the country simultaneously announced the setting up of several
financial institutions required to fund the projects. The setting up of the
Silk Road Fund and specifically of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
represented a necessary step to make the BRI a reality.
The Belt and Road Initiative attracted the interest of many
countries, and this was proven when in May 2017, the First Belt and Road Forum
for International Cooperation was held in Beijing. Leaders of many countries
attended the event, and this coming April, the Second Belt and Road Forum will
welcome more countries and leaders to the capital.
Regarding
Latin America and the Belt and Road
Initiative, as previously noted, 18 countries from Latin American and the
Caribbean have signed MOUs to join. Peru has not yet signed one, but the
country has a Free Trade Area Agreement with China, which has helped to
increase trade with China since the agreement went into effect in 2010. Now,
China is Peru’s biggest trade partner, and in 2018, exports of goods to China
accounted for nearly 28 percent of all goods sold abroad (the USA was in second
place with 17 percent). Chile and Costa Rica join Peru to make the three
countries in Latin America that have an FTA with China, and also to have
increased trade with China after the agreements took effect.
Regarding
investment and financing, countries like Peru have received a large influx of
Chinese investment not only in the mining and energy sectors, which are
traditional places of interest for Chinese companies, but also in sectors such
as construction and maintenance of roads. During the World Economic Forum
(Davos Forum) earlier this year, it was announced that Chinese company COSCO
Shipping Ports would invest up to 3 billion dollars in the construction of a
seaport in Chancay, a city north of Lima, Peru’s capital.
With
respect to people-to-people bonds, in recent years, the number of academic
exchanges has increased, with more students from Latin America studying in
China, and more Chinese students coming to the region. Also, professors from
both sides of the Pacific have been traveling more often and in larger numbers,
myself being one of them. Here the importance of learning one another´s
language is becoming more relevant to help achieve a better mutual
understanding.
In
summary, the Belt and Road Initiative
offers an excellent way to achieve major trade, investment and improve mutual
understanding for China and Latin-American. In this way, the renaissance of a
sort of Manila Galleon trade, connecting the Latin-American region with China
and the rest of Asia will become a reality. To avoid the kind of trade that
existed during the Manila galleons trade, when silver from Latin America was
exchanged for manufactured goods from China, a feature that is still prevalent
in the present trade pattern of China with the Latin American region, in which
Latin America send mainly minerals and agricultural products in exchange for
manufactured goods from China, Latin America can learn from China’s economic
development experience.
Before
China introduced economic reforms 40 years ago, the country had not much trade
with the world and mainly exported primary goods in exchange for manufactured
goods. However, through the introduction of modern technology, the upgrading of
skills of its labor force, and the modernization of its physical
infrastructure, among other factors, China has become an economic powerhouse
which exports to the world ever more sophisticated manufactured goods. Latin
America should learn from this example. China can offer the technology, the
investment needed for the modernization of its infrastructure, and Latin
America can learn how to improve the skills of its labor force from China’s
experience.
China
and Latin American are complementary economies. The Belt and Road Initiative could help to upgrade economic
relations. It is up to Latin American countries to take advantage of these
opportunities, and, as the Chinese saying, a win-win relationship could
materialize.
The author is the director of the
Center of Asian Studies at the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Peru.
Source:People’s Daily Online
The Belt and Road Initiative
promotes a substantial increase in the total value of Anhui Tongling’s foreign
trade. Enterprises in Tongling accelerated their pace of international market
expansion, especially for the South American market. (Photo by Guo Shining from
People’s Daily Online)
The Belt and Road Initiative and Latin America
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