What's new

China needs to make sure Pakistan is not Venezuela

ashok321

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 1, 2010
Messages
17,942
Reaction score
4
Country
Canada
Location
Malaysia
China needs to make sure Pakistan isn’t Venezuela

China’s frenzied drive to create a modern Silk Road puts Pakistan front and centre, much as Venezuela was once a target of lending by CDB as the nation sought to secure oil supplies


xi-khjD--621x414@LiveMint.JPG



Beijing’s frenzied drive to create a modern Silk Road puts Pakistan front and centre, much as Venezuela was once a target of lending by China Development Bank (CDB) as the nation sought to secure oil supplies.

Of the $6 billion to $7 billion of current development projects in Pakistan as part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, Beijing has provided the bulk of financing—local funding amounts to just $470 million.

Like its sister policy banks, CDB is charged with fulfilling China’s long-term economic vision, as exemplified by President Xi Jinping’s One Belt, One Road drive to build highways, power plants and ports across emerging Asia.

Late last month, CDB agreed on a $1.5 billion power plant and wharf deal in Hub, in Balochistan province, southwestern Pakistan. Along with the Export-Import Bank of China, CDB led a consortium that’s funding the coal-fired plant being jointly built by Hong Kong-listed China Power International Holding Ltd.


Policy lenders’ disbursements shouldn’t matter much to markets, as long as these banks don’t tap investors who expect a commercial return. But CDB and its smaller siblings, Agricultural Development Bank of China and Export-Import Bank, rely on market funding rather than deposits. CDB, for example, has a $30 billion bond issuance program and is now seeking investors for two new offshore notes.

Let’s revisit CDB’s Venezuela adventure.

The bank is on the hook for billions of dollars of lending to the hyperinflation-plagued Latin American nation. Last May, Venezuela engineered a default under which it deferred paying principal, honouring only the interest, on outstanding debts of at least $24 billion. Already, some of the projects undertaken with Chinese money, including a partly built high-speed railway, have been vandalized and abandoned.

Even as it struggles for repayment, China is lending Venezuela money, perhaps endorsing Keynes’s adage that great indebtedness is a problem for the bank, not the borrower.

China clearly is worried. Earlier this month, the China Banking Regulatory Commission released new rules requiring policy banks to shore up their capital by January. The combined assets of the three reached 25 trillion yuan ($3.8 trillion) in the third quarter, equivalent to those of the nation’s largest commercial bank, Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. Talk about systemic risk...

Last week’s bond rout upset the funding plans of these quasi-sovereign lenders. CDB excluded a 10-year note deal from its auction, while Export-Import Bank deferred a three-part sale. If the market shakeout persists for one or two more years, the policy banks will see large losses and may need to ask the ministry of finance to replenish capital, Justina Lee of Bloomberg News reported.

Meanwhile, Pakistan shows signs of discomfort with the relationship. The government balked at China’s intention to introduce the yuan as legal tender in the Gwadar Port free zone. And Islamabad said it will finance the Diamer-Bhasha dam itself, calling China’s offer to construct, operate and maintain the project unacceptable.

China’s desire to use the yuan is perhaps understandable. The Pakistan rupee is eerily stable, apart from a sudden 3.1% dip in early July, even as the nation’s foreign-exchange reserves deteriorate. The International Monetary Fund reckons the currency is 10 to 20% overvalued, and says Pakistan’s current-account deficit may widen to 3% of GDP as Chinese money flows in.

Pakistan views China’s push for the yuan as an infringement of its sovereignty. The reality is that this is about good risk control. Professions of brotherly love are all very well, but Beijing needs to avoid another Venezuela. Bloomberg Gadfly
 
. .
Pakistan sits very pretty on the fragile states Index, If anything the recent Islamabad Episode is enough to scare away any international economic interest.
I'd say its more sensible for china to think "Pakistan should not become next comparable Iraq or zimbabwe" .
Afterall Pakistan is a country poisoned by sectarianism ,religious extremism and political instability ,The countrymen will be happy to kill the countrymen ,As it has been.
 
.
If Pakistani don’t want a change to the better nobody can force them or help them!
 
.
If Pakistani don’t want a change to the better nobody can force them or help them!
well,i think at this point it only applies to keeping the US from invading and turning it into iraq or afghanistan
 
. .

Latest posts

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom