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China: A loan shark or the good Samaritan?

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DW: China: A loan shark or the good Samaritan?
Beijing has been accused of strong-arming poor countries through predatory lending as part of its Belt and Road Initiative. A new analysis seeks to debunk claims surrounding China's "debt-trap diplomacy."

May 5, 2019

Security hawks in the West, especially in the United States, look at China as a new imperial power that is creating vassal states through predatory loan practices.

Fueling their anxiety is China's colossal Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) — a gargantuan global infrastructure development project mostly backed by Beijing. By one estimate from mining company BHP, total spending on BRI-related projects could touch nearly $1.3 trillion (€1.16 trillion) in the decade to 2023 — more than seven times the investment made under the US Marshall Plan to rebuild European economies after World War II.

Some extol the Chinese project as a new Marshall Plan that could substantially reduce trade costs, improve connectivity and eventually help pull several countries out of poverty.

Others accuse China of bankrolling poor countries to boost its influence, even if it means extending loans for economically unviable projects. They cite Sri Lanka's Hambantota Port as a cautionary tale of the pitfalls of reliance on Chinese financing. China took control of the strategically important port in 2017 after Sri Lanka struggled to repay the Chinese loan.

Debunking 'debt-trap diplomacy'

But a new report by New York-based consultancy Rhodium Group challenges the claims surrounding China's "debt-trap diplomacy."

The authors of the report, who analyzed 40 cases of Chinese debt renegotiations with 24 countries, found that only the Sri Lankan case involved a confirmed asset seizure, while China's taking control of a piece of land in Tajikistan in 2011 may have been in exchange for debt forgiveness.

The analysis showed that China mostly deals gently with its delinquent borrowers. The country has renegotiated $50 billion of loans in the past decade with debt waivers and deferments the most common outcomes.

The renegotiated loans account for a significant portion of China's overseas lending. Academics at the China-Africa Research Initiative at Johns Hopkins University in the US have been tracking $143 billion worth of loans in Africa between 2000 and 2017, while researchers at Boston University have identified more than $140 billion in Chinese loans to Latin America and the Caribbean since 2005.

The report found that creditors had more leverage over China when they had access to alternative financing sources such as the International Monetary Fund or international capital markets.

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Curious case of Africa

China hawks in the West have often expressed their uneasiness at the country's deepening economic and military ties with Africa. China surpassed US as the continent's largest trading partner in 2009.

John Bolton, the US national security adviser, said late last year China was making "strategic use of debt to hold states in Africa captive to Beijing's wishes and demands."

Yet, a closer examination of Chinese loans shows that signing up for the BRI has not translated into African countries receiving more loans from Beijing, Jordan Link, research manager at the China-Africa Research Initiative, told DW.

On the contrary, annual lending to Africa fell significantly following the BRI announcement in 2013 and has hovered around those levels ever since. The Chinese Eximbank, the largest source of Chinese lending to the continent, has significantly reduced its lending in the past five years.

"If [Chinese President] Xi Jinping is using the BRI to marshal a confluence of economic and strategic gains in Africa, increased Chinese loan totals have not been a key factor," Link said.

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Risky affair

China lacked leverage in the case of resource-backed loans, the report showed.

The Asian economic powerhouse has struggled to collect its debt from Venezuela, the country's largest overseas creditor with over $60 billion worth of loans since 2007. Beijing was expecting to be paid in oil exports but Venezuela's political turmoil and a declining oil production has meant that it has only been receiving the interest on its loans.

Similarly, China struggled to get Ukraine to repay a loan, which was supposed to be repaid in the form of grain shipments. Beijing had to ultimately resort to international arbitration to resolve the dispute.

"The Ukraine case shows that despite China's size and growing international economic clout, its leverage in some of these cases remains quite limited, even in disputes with much smaller countries," the report said.

'Unsustainable' loans

But the concerns of the Western politicians are not completely unfounded.

"The sheer volume of debt renegotiations points to legitimate concerns about the sustainability of China's outbound lending," the report said, warning that the number of distressed countries could rise in the next few years given that many Chinese projects were launched from 2013 to 2016.

Chinese state-owned companies are preferred to develop the Chinese-financed projects — often without a transparent bidding process. This opacity creates opportunities for corruption and is seen as an incentive to inflate project costs. There are also concerns about the construction quality. Overpriced projects and a rising reliance on Chinese debt have made many developing countries wary of the ambitious project.

The study also found that debt waivers by China are sometimes followed by more, often bigger loans and are not aimed at reducing the delinquent borrower's indebtedness to China. Beijing wrote off $7 million of Botswana's debt last year only to allegedly offer as much as $1 billion in new infrastructure financing.

Gaining influence

The report said debt waivers were often conceded by Beijing without a formal renegotiation process, even when there were few signs that the borrower was facing financial distress.

This shows that the write-offs were probably meant to signal support to the borrowing countries, and improve bilateral relations, it said.

https://www.dw.com/en/china-a-loan-shark-or-the-good-samaritan/a-48671742
 
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Loan shark and peddler of usuary. In Islamic it is prohibited to charge riba [interest]. But what is expected of a idol worshipping athiest state?
 
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Loan shark and peddler of usuary. In Islamic it is prohibited to charge riba [interest]. But what is expected of a idol worshipping athiest state?
Just curious, do Muslims always do what Islam teach them to do? By the way, I m an atheist, we don't worship anything, what idols are you talking about?
 
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Just curious, do Muslims always do what Islam teach them to do?
We are required to do so. From Islamic POV all Chinese are kaffirs that we must conquer and convert. Furthermore from Islamic POV you have occupied Turkistan - the land of Muslims, which belongs to us. A jihad is in the offing.

Ps. During this holy month I am wearing my religious cap. So what you hear from is will be "Muslim" only.
 
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They are required to do so. From Islamic PV all Chinese are kaffirs that we must conquer and convert. Furthermore from Islamic POV you have occupied Turkistan - the land of Muslims, which belongs gto us.
LOL.. Are you actually PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT??? Someone who lost his mind is more like it, Come and conquer us then.
 
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Someone who lost his mind is more like it, Come and conquer us then.
That is what disbelivers said and we conquerd 1/4 of the known world. So it is written we shall do it again. Athiests like Chinese will feel the sharp blade of Islam.
 
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We are required to do so. From Islamic POV all Chinese are kaffirs that we must conquer and convert. Furthermore from Islamic POV you have occupied Turkistan - the land of Muslims, which belongs to us. A jihad is in the offing.

Ps. During this holy month I am wearing my religious cap. So what you hear from is will be "Muslim" only.

Muslim can't lie in the holy month, you're a good Muslim.

LOL.. Are you actually PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT??? Someone who lost his mind is more like it, Come and conquer us then.

He is labeled as liberal or gay by some Pakistani members here. All he said are true in Quran.:D
 
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That is what disbelivers said and we conquerd 1/4 of the known world. So it is written we shall do it again. Athiests like Chinese will feel the sharp blade of Islam.

I only feel the funny from a revisionist of Muslim talking in a Liverpool tone.
 
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China followed by India are abominations. One is athiest and is a blot of sin on earth that needs erasing. From it's ashes will rise our Muslim brothers to form Greater Turkistan which will will join the caliphate with Pakistan. Then India under Ghazwa Hind will be vanquished and converted to 100% halal beef eaters.

And is it a conicidence that the both abominations have men with smallest sized peanuts on earth?

@PAKISTANFOREVER has the facts.

Man you really need to see a doctor..
Nah, thanks I am cool. My penis is average to above average length. You need to see a doctor to stretch, fill it and make it bigger.
 
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Oh okay. You sound like a athiest, kaffir, jealous Chinese and a guy with a tiny thread hanging ....
You seem to be obsessed with some body parts and fantasy of conquering the world, you are indeed someone with great dreams , hats off.
 
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You seem to be obsessed with some body parts and fantasy of conquering the world, you are indeed someone with great dreams , hats off.
I think you need to look up at a decent dicionery and find out what "obsessed" means. Making one or two referances does not qualify for obsession.
 
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