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AIIB (Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank) news

hehehehehehehehhehe......seems my country really opened the floodgates for others to follow?:woot: What where they waiting for, our lead?o_O hmmmmm.........im really surprised this bank got so much members/applicants, Its like an international financial organization already. I didnt expect such a turnout. Interesting though. I like interesting geo political games. means more fun:enjoy::chilli:

Don't get carried away now :rofl: , here's some dose of reality check for ya Does the UK remain a world power? - BBC News
 
Yep. I am in a tourist shuttle bus to the cable car station. The picture is about the village at the foot of Jiuhuashan(one of the four major Buddhist mountains in China).

Enjoy your stay buddy! Safe travels. Pray for all of us. :)

Om Ma Nee Pad Nee Hum...

_/\_
 
UK shouldn't even be part of the UNSC. Neither should France.

Countries with no independent foreign policy should not have UNSC veto power.

European countries are just a branch of American foreign policy. Giving a vote to a European is just giving another vote to the U.S.
 
Enjoy your stay buddy! Safe travels. Pray for all of us. :)

Om Ma Nee Pad Nee Hum...

_/\_
南无阿弥陀佛
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China's IMF Challenger Bank Approves 7 New Founder Members, Now Totals 57

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China's Ministry of Finance has announced seven new founding-member nations to its Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), bringing the total to 57; Norway is also on the list, despite the deep freeze in relations over the Nobel peace prize row

The China-led AIIB has approved seven new nations as prospective founding members, bringing the total to 57.

The new nations to sign in are Sweden, Israel, South Africa, Azerbaijan, Iceland, Portugal and Poland.



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AIIB and BRICS Bank Pose Threat to Bretton-Woods Dollar System – Engdahl

Founding members of the AIIB have the right to help define the bank's rules, while countries that applied to join after March 31 will be considered ordinary members with voting rights only but less say in the rule-making process.

Norway is also on the list despite the complete freeze in relations and cutting all high-level ties between the two countries.

The conflict goes back to 2010 when the Nobel Peace Prize went to jailed Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo.

The Norwegian government had insisted that the Nobel Committee is independent and makes its own choices

The United States and Japan are the two major nations to have abstained from joining the AIIB.

On Tuesday, a senior Canadian finance official said that Ottawa was actively considering joining the institution, despite US and Japanese reservations, according to Reuters.

China Blocks Taiwan's Bid to Join AIIB as Founding Member

So far, Taiwan is the only territory to have been rejected its application.

China said it would welcome the island to join in the future "under an appropriate name".

China sees Taiwan, the self-ruled island of 23 million people as a renegade province; it considers Taiwan part of its territory and has repeatedly pledged to take it back, with the use of force being mulled as an option.

"Chinese Taipei" is the name Taiwan wants to use when joining the AIIB




Read more: China's IMF Challenger Bank Approves 7 New Founder Members, Now Totals 57 / Sputnik International
 
Don't get carried away now :rofl: , here's some dose of reality check for ya Does the UK remain a world power? - BBC News

Seen countless number of comments saying such senseless/eye catching things/rhetoric. thats music to my ears. The day the world stops speaking our language as defacto world language, we stop being part of P5, China becomes wealthier/have a better living standard than us, your officials/leaders stop sending their elite kids/children to live a better life and study here, you become overall more advanced than us technologically,you can get involved/influence our internal issues/affair the way we influence yours, we stop being the world's financial capital/hub. Etc etc then I will know we are not a world power and China is a superpower.:taz::bounce:
 
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Seen quite a countless number of comments saying such senseless things on thats music to my ears. The day the world stops speaking our language as defacto world language, we stop being part of P5, China becomes wealthier/have a better living standard than us, your officials/leaders stop sending their elite kids/children to live a better life and study here, you become overall more advanced than us technologically,you can get involved/influence our internal issues/affair the way we influence yours, we stop being the world's financial capital/hub. Etc etc then I will know we are not a world power and China is a superpower.:taz::bounce:
:rofl: , don't look at me it's a British journalist who wrote that article depicting your country that way lol. And for the record England hasn't been a world power for decades while China is seen as the rising power globally. I do acknowledge that UK does look after her own interest rather than blindly following what her own son tells her mother to do. By joining AIIB i certainly welcome this kind of "influence" England has and not placing ridiculous restrictions on Chinese investments like USA. Again don't get carried away, we know the reason why UK joined our bank is simply for trying to get Chinese benefits and improving ties. Hence USA criticizes UK for accommodating China :lol:
 
Seen countless number of comments saying such senseless/eye catching things/rhetoric. thats music to my ears. The day the world stops speaking our language as defacto world language, we stop being part of P5, China becomes wealthier/have a better living standard than us, your officials/leaders stop sending their elite kids/children to live a better life and study here, you become overall more advanced than us technologically,you can get involved/influence our internal issues/affair the way we influence yours, we stop being the world's financial capital/hub. Etc etc then I will know we are not a world power and China is a superpower.:taz::bounce:
Your tone is just like mike2000
 
China-led bank starts with 57 members
AFP
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No nations that formally sought to become founding members of the AIIB are known to have been refused. —Reuters
BEIJING: A total of 57 countries have been approved as founding members of a Chinese-led infrastructure bank, Beijing said on Wednesday, and Norway is included despite frosty relations over a Chinese dissident’s Nobel prize.

No nations that formally sought to become founding members of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) are known to have been refused. But Taiwan, the self-governing island that Beijing regards as part of its territory, had its application for founding membership rejected.

The last seven countries approved as founding members by Wednesday’s deadline were named by China’s finance ministry as Sweden, Israel, South Africa, Azerbaijan, Iceland, Portugal and Poland.

The 57 include four of the United Nations Security Council’s permanent five, 14 of the 28 European Union countries, and 21 members of the 34-strong Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

The line-up does not include the United States or Japan but represents a diplomatic coup for China after close US allies such as Britain, France, Germany and Australia decided to take part even after Washington initially opposed them signing up.

The institution is aimed at financing infrastructure across Asia rather than poverty reduction, and China’s official news agency Xinhua said in a commentary that it offered Western countries “lucrative business opportunities”.

“Welcoming passengers from around the world, an ‘Oriental Express’ train is getting ready to hit the rails toward a destination of common development and win-win cooperation,” it said.

The AIIB would “have a zero-tolerance policy on corruption” and “abide by stringent policies to avoid repeating past mistakes”, Xinhua added.

But critics have expressed concern about its standards and say it could rival the US-led World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, which is headed by Japan.

US Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker stressed the importance of such benchmarks to reporters in Shanghai.

“We welcome the AIIB as long as it adheres to the international standards that have been set by the existing multi-lateral organisations like the IMF, the World Bank or the ADB,” she said.

“If operated under those kind of standards, in fact I think there is enormous opportunity for collaboration.”

China has repeatedly said the institution is “open and inclusive”. It approved Norway despite cutting all high-level ties with Oslo after the Nobel Peace Prize went to Liu Xiaobo in 2010.

The Norwegian government has repeatedly maintained that the Nobel Committee is independent and makes its own choices, but Chinese authorities have torpedoed any attempts at normalising relations.

Published in Dawn, April 16th, 2015
 
Final list of 57 founding members of the AIIB
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • Azerbaijan
  • Bangladesh
  • Brazil
  • Brunei
  • Cambodia
  • China
  • Denmark
  • Egypt
  • Finland
  • France
  • Georgia
  • Germany
  • Iceland
  • India
  • Indonesia
  • Iran
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • Jordan
  • Kazakhstan
  • Kuwait
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Laos
  • Luxembourg
  • Malaysia
  • Maldives
  • Malta
  • Mongolia
  • Myanmar
  • Nepal
  • Netherlands
  • New Zealand
  • Norway
  • Oman
  • Pakistan
  • Philippines
  • Poland
  • Portugal
  • Qatar
  • Republic of Korea
  • Russia
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Singapore
  • South Africa
  • Spain
  • Sri Lanka
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • Tajikistan
  • Thailand
  • Turkey
  • UAE
  • United Kingdom
  • Uzbekistan
  • Vietnam
 
.http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2015-04/15/c_134153438.htm
Interview: Too early to fret over AIIB's stake structure: Japanese economist - Xinhua | English.news.cn

Interview: Too early to fret over AIIB's stake structure: Japanese economist
English.news.cn 2015-04-15 15:10:26

by Yan Liang, Liu Tian

TOKYO, April 15 (Xinhua) -- Concerns that China's large stake in its new initiative of a multilateral development bank would lead to an unchallengeable status for the country within the framework have not abated since the concept of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) came into being.

However, a Japanese economist, who calls on his country to join the AIIB at an early date, said it is unnecessary to worry about the shareholding structure of the bank at a time when details related to the bank's governance and stake structure are still pending.

Kiyoyuki Seguchi, research director of the Canon Institute for Global Studies, told Xinhua during an exclusive interview Tuesday that as the AIIB is open to all, China's shareholding will gradually decline with more countries being included in the multilateral development bank and the trend would also be acceptable to all members.

He further pointed out "It is a convention that countries should negotiate first and then decide whether or not to join an international mechanism," adding it is premature to be concerned over transparency and governance issues.

"Compared to the shareholding structure, the way members use their stakes will be more important after the structure is settled, " the expert said.

"However, China's economic scale is so large already, and, according to the International Monetary Fund, its economic scale will be 2.3 times as much as Japan's this year, so it is natural for China to have its stake as 2.3 times as large as Japan's," if Japan decides to join the AIIB, said Seguchi.

The former Rand Corporation international visiting fellow suggested that large shareholding proportions will not necessarily lead to a monopoly since China understands that credibility is significant for the AIIB and it would plunge if China makes decisions at its own will based on its large share.

China has reiterated on different occasions that the AIIB will uphold high standards and learn from the best practices of existing multilateral financial institutions.

Jin Liqun, secretary general of the interim multilateral secretariat of the AIIB, said Saturday that all members will be committed to building a bank which would be lean, clean and green. "Lean is cost effective; clean, this bank will have zero-tolerance on corruption; green means it's going to promote the economy," Jin detailed.

"If China pays enough respect to and follows the traditions of international developmental banks well enough in terms of transparency, governance, environmental protection and energy saving to manage the AIIB, every member will support and respect China's proposals," Seguchi said.

"To this extent, I am confused over Japan's stance to stay out of the AIIB," Seguchi said, saying that Japan should join the AIIB soon so as to be involved in the mechanism's establishment, rather than complaining as an outsider asking for change.

He said that more than half of the Japanese business circle hope Japan joins the AIIB since its cause to develop the Asian region could boost Japanese companies' performances and Japan's participation will also help the AIIB as a financing screen so as to prevent the AIIB from possible distressed debt in the future, as Japan is a seasoned country when it comes to managing a multilateral development bank.

"The AIIB and Japan could forge a win-win situation for both sides. The success of the AIIB will not only benefit China, but also Japan and the entire region," said Seguchi, who maintains an optimistic attitude toward the China-proposed bank and believes that the AIIB will play a constructive role in improving the regional economy and infrastructural development.

"It is known to all that the Asian Development Bank (ADB) is trapped by its limited financing capability and the United States is opposed to the bank's enlarged scale. Therefore, China proposed the AIIB framework to complement the ADB," Seguchi said, adding "A lot of Asian countries will benefit from the AIIB since they face severe financial deficit in infrastructure construction."

Besides Seguchi, other Japanese economic heavyweights and former senior diplomats also urged Japan to join the AIIB at an early date so as to cooperate with other members to boost regional development.

Former Finance Minister Hisahiro Fujii told Xinhua that the AIIB will play a key role of broad cooperation in the region and it could also serve as a platform for regional countries to develop friendship that could lead to regional peace and prosperity.

Meanwhile, Ukeru Magosaki, former chief of the Intelligence and Analysis Bureau at the Japanese Foreign Ministry, said that the most ideal situation for Japan is to forge interdependent relations with regional countries based on pragmatic interests from cooperation.

To this extent, Japan should be the first to announce its decision to join the AIIB, Magosaki told Xinhua, adding that Japan, right now, missed a good opportunity to join the new initiative and, therefore, it needs to reflect on its miscalculation and make a final decision soon.

Seguchi also said that Japan should make its own decision, although there are pressures exerted on it by the United States.
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