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How China is building the future in sub-Saharan Africa – and why the US needs to rethink its approac

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Eric Mboma says China’s role in Congo’s economic and infrastructural development shows the nature and reach of its global aspirations, whereas America’s focus on political institutions and humanitarian goals is proving less attractive than actual jobs and growth

While much is made of China’s expanding footprint in Asia, the reach of its global aspirations can be seen in Africa. The Democratic Republic of Congo reveals the complex dynamics of China’s interaction with the continent, and the inability of the US to balance it.

The fundamental reason for this state of affairs is that American and Chinese foreign-policy priorities in sub-Saharan Africa, of which Congo is a part, diverge considerably.

According to a 2013 study conducted by the US Government Accountability Office, America’s goals include building democracy, promoting development, supporting commerce and strengthening security. Beijing, by contrast, emphasises its mission of establishing closer ties with African countries. Its principles of engagement include seeking mutual benefit, and not interfering in the domestic affairs of African countries.

While economic engagement features on the agendas of both nations, the US’ democracy-building efforts differ markedly from China’s stance. In Congo – as, actually, anywhere else in the developing world – states prefer the pursuit of economic interest over being pursued by others over democracy and human rights.

This is understandable: states are inherently conservative in defending their sovereignty. But what is more interesting is that the Congolese people themselves exemplify the general African preference for Chinese economic investment over American humanitarian aid and calls to strengthen democracy.

As Jacob Kushner argues in an article published in The American Interest, it is “clear that the Congolese admire the Chinese model founded upon private enterprise and non-interference in their domestic politics”. It is not that Africans are apathetic to the necessity of democratic structures: no people are, no matter what their governments say. Rather, it is that political norms sound hollow when economic and infrastructural development is woefully inadequate in meeting basic material needs.

The Congolese prioritise economics over politics for obvious reasons. The country is among the poorest in the world, with per capita income standing at a mere US$380 in 2014 and the poverty rate towering at 63 per cent in 2012. It was ranked 176 out of 187 countries on the Human Development Index last year.

However, it is actually a rich country with poor people. Two-thirds the size of the European Union, it has 80 million hectares of arable land and contains more than 1,100 identified minerals and precious metals.

Within resource-abundant Africa, it is home to the biggest reserves of precious ores, including diamonds, gold, cassiterite, copper and cobalt (of which Congo houses the largest reserves). The country’s estimated mineral wealth is a staggering US$24 trillion – equivalent to the combined GDP of the United States and Europe! No wonder the World Bank believes Congo has the potential to become one of the richest countries on the continent and a driver of African growth.

What s required is an economic model that will work for the country.

Applying what is known as the Hausmann Rodrik Velasco methodology to Congo, the four main “binding constraints” that are specific to its economic environment are: government failures; lack of finance; lack of energy infrastructure; and lack of transport infrastructure.

The World Bank believes the investment needed in Congo is one of the highest in Africa. The bank has supported a study that comprises a prioritisation framework for infrastructure, and has placed the scope of investment needs at some US$5 billion a year.

Experts argue that no two developing countries will face the exact same set of constraints, and attempting to categorise them in that way will be unproductive.

This is where China makes a crucial difference. Its Congo policy is targeted specifically at developing infrastructure, in keeping with the Harvard economists’ methodology. By contrast, US policy appears to be one-size-fits-all, and relatively less tailored to the specific needs of Congo.

Roads, schools and hospitals built by the Chinese have transformed the country’s economic prospects. Indeed, Congo has posted a respectable annual average economic growth rate of close to 8 per cent since 2010, well above the average for sub-Saharan Africa.

Today, China is going as far as setting up local operations in Congo to export commodities back to its own industrial sector. China reaps the lion’s share of dividends from the partnership, but the Congolese, too, benefit. For example, Congo’s inability to cut and finish the diamonds for which it is famous was a drag on development.

Congo is a part of the Chinese strategy of economic development. China does not possess sufficient strategic resources to fuel its industries. Hence, it has been procuring them abroad, locking up supplies by encouraging state-owned enterprises and private companies to strike exclusive mining deals worldwide.

China already has a monopoly over rare earth elements, which are key ingredients for most hi-tech manufactured goods, including cars, television sets and mobile phones. Congo is one of the few places that boast a dependable supply of these elements. This is a source of the synergy between Chinese and Congolese interests.

By contrast, US strategy remains caught up in a political time warp even in the face of Chinese advances. US aid has gone largely into the improvement of health care and other humanitarian areas while China speeds ahead with helping Congo’s infrastructure development.

Not only does American economic coyness impinge on countries such as Congo, but it also touches on American interests themselves. For example, the Chinese locking up of oil resources in Africa may affect US energy security because Beijing would have the ability to take these oil sources off the world market and use them exclusively for its own industrial development.

The truth is that the US cannot afford to ignore China in Africa any more than in the Asia-Pacific and the Middle East.

While Sino-US rivalry is not as acute as was hostility between the United States and the Soviet Union during the cold war scramble for Africa, today’s rivalry is real. As in the Middle East, the Chinese are making incremental gains in Africa even as the Americans are challenged to maintain the strategic status quo, which is to their advantage.

In the Asia-Pacific, of course, the Chinese are closing in rapidly. The establishment of the Beijing-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank against Washington’s wishes is a case in point.

Congo exemplifies the need for America to refocus its diplomatic attention to Africa, with a strong emphasis on economic and infrastructural development, in order to balance China’s global ambitions.
 
China's development experiences extremely useful to Africa: UN official
Source: Xinhua | 2016-04-30 13:58:27 | Editor: huaxia

VICTORIA FALLS, Zimbabwe, April 30 (Xinhua) -- A UN official has said that China's development experiences were extremely useful to the African continent because the Asian nation had passed through the same situation that Africa finds itself today.

Abdalla Hamdok, deputy executive secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), has told Xinhua on the sidelines of the 3rd Africa Think Tank Summit in Zimbabwe's resort town of Victoria Falls.

Africa looked positively to China's development experiences and could immensely benefit from collaboration with the Asian nation in the area of knowledge-sharing, said Hamdok.

"China is an African friend, a partner over the years and Africa can benefit a lot from China experiences," said Hamdok."...the experiences that will be useful to the continent as it implements its development agenda."

Officials and experts attending the event said China can play a critical role in supporting African think tanks to build the capacity of African governments in implementing the African Union (AU) Agenda 2063 and the Sustainable Development Goals.

Emmanuel Nnadozie, executive secretary of intergovernmental organization, the African Capacity Building Foundation (ACBF), told Xinhua that African think tanks were poorly resourced, and this affected their ability to effectively play their capacity building role on the continent.

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Workers work at the construction site of Tsavo River Bridge on section two of Kenya's Standard Gauge Railway project, near Voi, Kenya, on March 18, 2015. (Xinhua/Pan Siwei)

"China can play a very critical role in supporting African think tanks in a number of ways, and the first is to assist African think tanks to deal with their number one challenge, which is the challenge of their own sustainability and effectiveness," Nnadozie said.

African think tanks could also benefit through cooperation in knowledge and information sharing with Chinese think tanks, he said.

"China can provide a platform where there can be exchange of ideas, collaborative work and sharing of experiences which will promote knowledge sharing and learning," Nnadozie added.

He said apart from financial challenges, African think tanks also faced the challenge of inadequate skills, making themselves unable to influence policy making and policy implementation in a positive way.

AU Commissioner for Economic Affairs Mothae Maruping told Xinhua that the AU supported South-South cooperation in the area of knowledge sharing in support for development.

"All help that can be mobilized for our think tanks will be most welcome so that they are alive and vibrant and able to exchange views with think tanks from elsewhere in the world," said Maruping."We welcome support, particularly from those who have been struggling like us."

The summit which ran from April 8-9 was organized by the ACBF in partnership with the African Union Commission, NEPAD and UNECA to discuss the role that African think tanks can play in supporting implementation of SDGs and Agenda 2063.
 
this is China in Africa in a nutshell

go to Africa....finance infrastructure projects, build the projects, and get paid in natural resources.

in the end they'll still be governed by corrupt leaders and taken advantage from foreigners be it Europeans or Chinese :D
 
in the end they'll still be governed by corrupt leaders and taken advantage from foreigners be it Europeans or Chinese


Not entirely or necessarily true. Corruption can be defined as it fits your political interests. To, monied-politics is the worst form of corruption, as it happens in the US.

But even if it is true in the African context, it is better than being governed by blood thirsty genocidal US-sponsored and protected military junta.

People on the ground know it very well. People do study history.
 
this is China in Africa in a nutshell

go to Africa....finance infrastructure projects, build the projects, and get paid in natural resources.

in the end they'll still be governed by corrupt leaders and taken advantage from foreigners be it Europeans or Chinese :D

Dont use European standards against Chinese in Africa.

Apples and oranges. Chinese come to do business, the Europeans came to steal and plunder and enslave. There is no common ground, only the pretentious high horse attitudes of the former slavers.

What that fcuker King leopold of Belgium did in the congo is just a small example of the depths of Western barbarity in africa.
 
Dont use European standards against Chinese in Africa.

Apples and oranges. Chinese come to do business, the Europeans came to steal and plunder and enslave. There is no common ground, only the pretentious high horse attitudes of the former slavers.

What that fcuker King leopold of Belgium did in the congo is just a small example of the depths of Western barbarity in africa.


same game different tactics.

they are getting a better under the Chinese, but Africa still ran by Africans and that means it'll never change.
 
this is China in Africa in a nutshell

go to Africa....finance infrastructure projects, build the projects, and get paid in natural resources.

in the end they'll still be governed by corrupt leaders and taken advantage from foreigners be it Europeans or Chinese :D

Don't put China into the same basket as Europeans, we do thing differently than Western countries, we will bring success where you guys failed and this is China's chance to prove to the world that we can have win-win in Africa. I think western countries feel the pressure of been losers in Africa and see a successful China as threat to it owns backyard and they start to rethink their approaches on how to win heard and mind of African people, some are even willing to cooperate with China.

As for corrupted leaders, China has too but when we build infrastructures in these countries and boost they economy such as Congo with 8% growth, it will have better chance to lifted the poverty and rise the living standard of Africans which what they expect of.
 
Spotlight: Chinese firms in Africa dedicated to transferring skills, fulfilling social responsibility
Source: Xinhua | 2016-04-26 21:18:07 | Editor: huaxia

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Bulldozers work at a construction site on section two of Kenya's Standard Gauge Railwayproject, companied with a segment of old railway, near Voi, Kenya, on March 19, 2015.(Xinhua/Pan Siwei)

NAIROBI, April 26 (Xinhua) -- Huawei Technologies, China's leading global Information and Communication Technology solution provider, has initiated various programs aimed at transferring skills to Africans and fulfilling social responsibility.

The skills transfer programs and the launching of numerous Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) projects which have been initiated in partnership with African governments, will not only improve the living conditions of the beneficiaries, but will also boost relations between China and the African continent.

On Sunday, the company signed a partnership agreement with the Nigerian government to initiate a social development program that would empower 1,000 youths in information and communications technology (ICT).

Special Assistant to the President on Youth and Student Affairs Nasir Adhama said this was part of the government's efforts in addressing the issue of unemployment in the country.

The initiative would commence at a date to be announced soon, he said, noting that his office would select and screen the beneficiary participants from all geopolitical zones of the country for the training.

"Out of the 1,000 youths that would be trained by Huawei Africa, 200 would be sent to China for more training on ICT," he added.

Huawei which is one of the global brands in ICT, would also establish a world class ICT center in Nigeria to create more opportunities for Nigerian youths.

BOOSTING TECHNICAL LEARNING IN ETHIOPIA

In March 2016, Huawei signed a partnership agreement with a Kenyan-based company, Techno Brain, which is a leading custom software application provider, to launch Huawei Authorized Learning Partnership (HALP) in Ethiopia, with the main goal being knowledge transfer in the ICT sector.

Speaking to Xinhua after the signing ceremony, Techno Brain Ethiopia Country Director Mekonnen Tesafye said "the partnership allows us to give much needed training skills upgrade for ICT professionals in Ethiopia."

Speaking during the same function, Huawei's Deputy Chief Executive Officer in Ethiopia, Cooper Qu, noted that his company had in the last few years, provided Ethiopia with ICT infrastructure to improve service provision in government as well as in education, transport and finance sectors.

"With this partnership, Techno Brain and Huawei can provide the most advanced ICT learning platform to Ethiopian people, so that they can improve their professional ICT capacity and create more value to this country," he said.

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File photo shows China's Huawei Technologies handing over refurbished works of parts of the Accra Central library to the Ghana Library Authority.(Xinhua/Lin Xiaowei)

PROVISION OF EFFICIENT ICT SOLUTIONS IN ZAMBIA

Like in other African countries where it has set up operations, Huawei Zambia has expressed its long-term plan of providing the Zambian government and population with efficient and affordable Information and Communications Technology (ICT) solutions.

Speaking recently during an exhibition of Huawei products in the Zambian capital, Lusaka, the company's Country Director Emilion Ming noted that "the vision of both the Zambian government and Huawei, will in the near future enable everyone in the country to enjoy modern telecommunication technology equally and conveniently."

Speaking during the same function, China's ambassador to Zambia Yang Youming commended the firm for its continuous efforts to promote ICT development in Zambia.

Huawei has been operating in Zambia for 12 years.

CHINESE CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES JOIN THE FRAY

Just like their counterparts in the ICT sector, Chinese construction companies have also joined the fray in launching programs to facilitate technology transfer, besides initiating CSR projects in their areas of operation.

The latest such company is the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC), the firm building a standard gauge rail in Kenya, which in March this year, launched its first CSR report.

Speaking during the ceremony to release the report in Nairobi, Kenya's Principal Secretary in the Transport Ministry Irungu Nyakera said the CRBC had brought lots of benefits to local communities where the rail passes through.

"The efforts by CRBC need to be emulated by other contractors who carry out infrastructure projects in Kenya," Nyakera said.

CRBC is constructing a 472 km rail in Kenya, which will replace a narrow-gauge track built over a century ago during British colonial rule.

The CSR report highlights the Chinese company's voluntary activities to boost sustainable development in Kenya, including environmental protection efforts, charity work, job creation and personnel training.
 
What China is doing for Africa is 10,000x more beneficial for the African people than 400+ suffering years of Western European enslavement-subjugation--conveniently the notions of 'human rights' and 'equality' did not exist during the time when the Whites were going around murdering and robbing everyone, then all of a sudden when they had no choice but to give up their colonies, suddenly the well being of people mattered, only when they are no longer in control lol.
 
Western people always assume that we're there to exploit Africa and steal african resource as they did for centuries but they don't know that China not only want to be successful in Africa but to have a successful Africa to boost China's image or increase China international prestige. Sure there is abuse from some Chinese people in African but that's not the intention of Chinese government. Lifting the poverty and rise the living standard of African people is crucial for China because only by helping African will earn China's credibility to do business elsewhere such South America or Middle east.

 
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this is China in Africa in a nutshell

go to Africa....finance infrastructure projects, build the projects, and get paid in natural resources.

in the end they'll still be governed by corrupt leaders and taken advantage from foreigners be it Europeans or Chinese :D

Sour grapes alert.

In the end the Africans have better infrastructure for their daily life needs, that is a hell a lot of differences.

 
Chinese, Kenyan universities ink deal to train oil experts
Source: Xinhua | 2016-05-03 16:01:10 | Editor: huaxia

NAIROBI, May 3 (Xinhua) -- China University of Petroleum has entered into a partnership with Mount Kenya University (MKU) on training of experts in the oil industry.

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A worker walks past tanks in Bidco's factory, on the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenya, on July 21, 2015.(Xinhua/Pan Siwei)

The deal of the partnership was signed on Sunday by Chairman of MKU, professor Simon Gicharu and Dr. Fengchi Luan, Dean, College of International Education at China University of Petroleum.

Through the deal, the two higher learning institutions will engage in students exchange so as to develop joint scientific and technological research projects.

Gicharu said the purpose of the partnership is to develop academic cooperation on the basis of equality and reciprocity and to promote relations and mutual understandings between both universities.

"This deal spells a bright future for our students and faculty. Kenya, and indeed Africa is replete with natural resources but lacks enough manpower to tap these resources," Gicharu said.

The two institutions will jointly promote and develop academic cooperation, exchange teaching staff and research personnel.

"Empowering local communities by improving the knowledge base has always been one of our key drivers," said MKU Vice-Chancellor Stanley Waudo.

China University of Petroleum is considered to be the best higher education institution in petroleum related studies in China. The university was founded in 1953, as Beijing Petroleum Institute.
 

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