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Poor Countries Borrowed Billions from China. They Can’t Pay It Back.

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Nations want Beijing to forgive or renegotiate loans as their economies suffer. Doing so would be costly. Saying no could hurt China’s global image.



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The changing skyline of Colombo, Sri Lanka, in 2018. Hungry for money to stir growth, Sri Lanka has borrowed heavily from China in recent years.Credit...Adam Dean for The New York Times

By Maria Abi-Habib and Keith Bradsher

  • May 18, 2020
阅读简体中文版閱讀繁體中文版

As the coronavirus spread around the globe, Pakistan’s foreign minister called his counterpart in Beijing last month with an urgent request: The country’s economy was nose-diving, and the government needed to restructure billions of dollars of Chinese loans.

Similar requests have come flooding in to Beijing from Kyrgyzstan, Sri Lanka and a number of African nations, asking to restructure, delay repayments or forgive tens of billions of dollars of loans coming due this year.

With each request, China’s drive to become the developing world’s biggest banker is backfiring. Over the last two decades it unleashed a global lending spree, showering countries with hundreds of billions of dollars, in an effort to expand its influence and become a political and economic superpower. Borrowers put up ports, mines and other crown jewels as collateral.

Now, as the world economy reels, countries are increasingly telling Beijing they can’t pay the money back.


China faces difficult choices. If it restructures or forgives these loans, that could strain its financial system and infuriate the Chinese people, who are suffering under their own slowdown. But if China demands repayment when many countries are already angry with Beijing over its handling of the pandemic, its quest for global clout could be at risk.
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“China is politically on the back foot,” said Andrew Small, senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund. Should China foreclose on those loans, he added, “they would be taking over strategic assets in countries that now can’t afford to feed their people.”

China’s global reputation is on the line. Countries are openly questioning its role in the coronavirus outbreak, after Chinese officials in January initially downplayed the severity and contagiousness of the disease. Beijing is selling and donating masks and equipment to help its battered image. A misstep could deal its global ambitions a major setback.

At the same time, the financial stakes are huge. The Kiel Institute, a German research group,pegs China’s lending to the developing world at $520 billion or more, with the vast majority doled out in the last few years. That makes Beijing a bigger lender than the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund.

At the forefront of the spree is the Belt and Road Initiative, President Xi Jinping’s $1 trillion program to finance infrastructure projects across the world and pick up allies in the process. Since the initiative started in 2013, China has lent up to $350 billion to countries, about half of them considered high-risk debtors.

China has dismissed the idea of mass debt forgiveness but signaled that it is willing to negotiate. In some cases it has already acted: The Kyrgyzstan governmentannounced in April that China agreed to reschedule $1.7 billion of debt repayments, without disclosing details.

Others are hoping for relief too. “Not only from China have we requested,” said S.R. Attygalle, Sri Lanka’s secretary to the treasury, in an interview, citing requests to Japan and China’s Export-Import Bank. In the meantime, he said, China Development Bank widened a credit line by $700 million to help Sri Lanka cope, lowered the interest rate and delayed the repayment timeline by two years.


Beyond those steps, Chinese officials haven’t yet decided how to tackle the problem, say people familiar with some of the deliberations.

Debt relief is“not simple or effective,” Song Wei, an official in the research arm of China’s Ministry of Commerce, wrote in the Global Times, a newspaper controlled by the Communist Party. “What China could do to help is bring projects funded by loans back to life and realize sustainable profits, instead of measures as simple as offering write-offs.”

Continue reading the main story
Belt and Road had become a sensitive subject before the outbreak. Chinese officials worried whether too many banks and companies were pouring money into the same countries with scant coordination. China’s financial system is already straining under debt accumulated by state-run companies and local governments to keep growth humming.

shrink for the first time since the Mao era.
The lending has drawn scrutiny outside China, too.

China’s loans differ from most other loans to developing countries by rich nations or by institutions like the World Bank. They tend to carry higher interest rates and shorter maturities, requiring refinancing every couple years. They frequently use national assets as collateral. Those features gave Chinese state-controlled banks the confidence to lend to poor countries.

In some places, lending has soared. Djibouti’s debts to China jumped to more than 80 percent of its annual economic output. Ethiopia’s debt to China totals 20 percent of its annual output. In Kyrgyzstan, the amount is about 40 percent.

The Trump administration has accused China of “debt trap diplomacy,” lending more money than poor countries could afford to seize strategic assets and to expand its military and economic footprint.

Beijing denies these accusations, and many Chinese experts agree. Seizing collateral overseas is difficult, they argue. Loans cost more because Chinese lenders face the real prospect of not getting paid back.

“A lot of the loans should have higher interest rates that should reflect the correct risk,” said Chen Long, a partner at Plenum, a Beijing economic analysis firm.

But an anti-China backlash has grown in recent years as countries struggled to pay off debts. Belt and Road projects have often proven unprofitable, leaving taxpayers with hefty bills. When Beijingseized a strategic seaport in Sri Lanka as collateral, debtor nations watched with concern.
China also relied on a secretive web of bilateral negotiations for Belt and Road, to line officials’ pockets or get them to agree to unreasonable terms, some debtor countries claim. Malaysiapushed back on a $16 billion loan package, pressuring Beijing to cut it to $11 billion.

Now it appears Beijing underestimated the risk that severe credit problems might afflict all developing countries at the same time. China still insists on dealing with its debtor countries individually. But leaders in those places are increasingly calling for broad global efforts to help with their problems.
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“China wants to keep Belt and Road countries divided, as they are stronger than each country individually,” said Benn Steil, the director of international economics at the Council of Foreign Relations.

In April, Pakistan’s prime minister appealed to wealthy countries and institutions for debt relief for all developing nations. Two weeks later, the Group of 20 nations, which includes Chinaannounced it would freeze all debt payments for the world’s poorest countries until the end of the year.
But Mr. Song, the Commerce Ministry official, wrote in the Global Times that preferential loans from the Export-Import Bank of China are “not applicable for debt relief.” The Export-Import Bank of China is Belt and Road’s money pot, financing more than 1,800 projects worth at least $149 billion, the lender revealed last year.

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The pressure on China will only increase as the global economic crisis deepens. Officials familiar with the debt negotiations said many countries are demanding China provide debt relief or forgiveness, including a number of African countries.

Ethiopia, Africa’s fastest-growing economy, has asked China to cancel part of its debt load and is taking a lead role on behalf of African nations in negotiations, several officials said.

“These are early days. But I know the Chinese have generally been recognizing of the challenges that countries are in,” said the state minister of finance Eyob Tekalign Tolina in an interview, adding that a bloc of the “least developed” African countries have called for debt cancellation. “Given the overall global shock and the pandemic’s effect on growth, this is a call for support,” he said.

But Ghana’s finance minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, said in a video interview with the Center for Global Development that China needed to do more and “come on stronger.”

Chinese officials insist that they will continue to do projects in the developing world. Pakistan last week awarded a $5.8 billion dam-building contract to a Chinese state-owned company’s joint venture with the commercial unit of the Pakistani army. Financing details weren’t released.

But if China strikes hard bargains, debtor nations could band together and try to present a united front. They could reveal the extent of their Chinese loans and their terms and conditions, which could put even more focus on the problem. Other countries could shift how they lend, which could force China to change its ways or ease back.

“It’s a reckoning for China,” said Scott Morris, a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, a think tank.

“When you look at the breadth and scope of the countries that may default, it could be a very high risk for China. Will they take an inevitable write-down on some of these debts? Or will they be willing to seize countries’ assets during such a sensitive time?”



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Image
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China lent heavily to Sri Lanka, particularly for the construction of the Hambantota Port, and then took possession of the port when the country ran into trouble repaying the loans.Credit...Adam Dean for The New York Times
Salman Masood and Simon Marks contributed reporting.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/18/business/china-loans-coronavirus-belt-road.html
 
.
Poor nation can NOT pay back loan from US manipulated World Bank and IMF. World Bank and IMF are the biggest loaner, show some sympathy, forgive those debt first.
 
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The west is so straight forward that they just directly take what they need, I call it robbery or thief. While China do business on the basis of mutual understanding, and to the most extent China gives those "borrowers" the best deal(low or zero interest loan), that is very kind. At least in China's dictionary, we advocate courtesy demands reciprocity, we do not take their resources for granted, that’s how friends relationship last long.
 
.
China’s loans differ from most other loans to developing countries by rich nations or by institutions like the World Bank. They tend to carry higher interest rates and shorter maturities, requiring refinancing every couple years. They frequently use national assets as collateral. Those features gave Chinese state-controlled banks the confidence to lend to poor countries.

In some places, lending has soared. Djibouti’s debts to China jumped to more than 80 percent of its annual economic output. Ethiopia’s debt to China totals 20 percent of its annual output. In Kyrgyzstan, the amount is about 40 percent.
 
. .
Western logic is that IMF and WB loans are halal. Chinese loans are haram. Yet, developing nations have no issues taking Chinese loans which are easier to pay off.

The US thinks it has an upper hand whilst critcising Chinese loans. It doesn't. If China shows patience and leniency it will not only win more support and praise from developing nations. It will also showcase itself as a highly credible and reliable partner in time of need.
 
.

Debt relief actions taken by Chinese authorities

Year Country Description Amount (US Dollars)


2000 Vanuatu China agrees to write off 5 million USD of outstanding loan payments from Vanuatu relating to

the construction of a parliamentary complex and law school

$ 5,000,000

2001 Equatorial Guinea Chinese President Jiang Zemin announces an agreement on debt relief for Equatorial Guinea but

no specific amount is mentioned

NA

2001 Cameroon China cancels up to $34 million of Cameroon's debt $ 34,000,000

2001 Ethiopia China cancels $122.56 million of Ethiopian debt. $ 122,560,000

2001 Mali China cancels 37 billion CFA francs worth of Mali debt. $ 49,900,000

2001 Sudan China cancels 63 percent ($40.131 million) of Sudan's $63.7 million debt. $ 40,131,000

2001 Zambia China cancels USD$40 million in Zambian debt. $ 40,000,000

2001 Uganda Ugandan Vice President Wandira Specioza Kazibwe and Chinese Vice President Hu Jintao sign an

agreement for China to cancel 50 million USD of debt.

$ 50,000,000

2001 Burundi Burundi's External Relations and Cooperation Minister and the Chinese ambassador to Burundi

sign an agreement for partial write off of debt worth 38 billion Burundi Francs.

$ 45,722,577

2001 Angola A Chinese economic and trade delegation promises to write off about 10 percent of Angola's $80

million external debt to China during a three-day visit to Luanda.

$ 8,000,000

2001 Congo, Rep. Chinese deputy economy minister Zhang Xiang signs an agreement cancelling $75 million of

maturing debt owed by the Republic of Congo.

$ 75,000,000

2001 Guinea-Bissau China cancels $5.8 million in debts owed by Guinea-Bissau. $ 5,800,000

2001 Niger President Tandja and PM Hama Amadou sign a protocol on forgiving $12 million of Niger's debt

owed to China.

$ 12,000,000

2001 Mozambique Sun Zhenyu, Chinese vice-minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation, announces that

China will write off 22 million US dollars of Mozambique's debt.

$ 22,000,000

2001 Kenya The Chinese government cancels 113 million RMB yuan (about $13.66 million USD) of Kenya's

debts owed to China.

$ 13,652,177

2001 Tanzania The government of China agrees to cancel part of Tanzania's debt with a value of over $70 million. $ 70,877,778

2001 Madagascar The Chinese Assistant Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation and the Madagascar

Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs sign an agreement to reduce USD 30 million of debt (64% of

the total debt owed).

$ 30,000,000

2001 Rwanda Chinese President Jiang Zemin and Rwandan President Paul Kagame signed a debt reduction deal

cancelling loans totaling 113 million yuan.

$ 13,673,924

2001 Lesotho China writes off R40-million debt owed by Lesotho for the construction of a national convention

center.

$ 4,646,203

2002 Afghanistan China agrees to write off all of Afghanistan's debt. $ 19,500,000

2002 Cambodia At the ASEAN summit, Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji announced the cancellation of Cambodia's

debts

$ 200,000,000

2002 Cameroon China and Cameroon agree to reschedule a loan of nearly 4,000 million FCFA (6 million dollars). $ 5,738,978

2002 Ghana China agrees to write off 85 percent of the debt owed by Ghana, the equivalent of $53.5 million

USD.

$ 53,500,000

2002 Myanmar China writes off $72 million of the debt owed by Myanmar to China. $ 72,000,000

2002 Yemen Yemen and China sign an agreement that eliminates 84 million USD out of an outstanding $185

million debt to China.

$ 84,000,000

2003 Bolivia China agrees to forgive debt owed by Bolivia. The amount is not provided. N/A

2003 Ghana China cancels the $66 million USD debt owed by Ghana. $ 66,000,000

2003 Guyana China cancels 20 million USD of loan repayments from Guyana. $ 20,000,000

2003 Eritrea Eritrean Economic Advisor and China's Vice Minister for Foreign Trade and Economic

Cooperation sign a $3m debt cancellation agreement.

$ 3,000,000

2003 Kyrgyz Republic China EXIM restructures Kyrgyzstan's state debt of 250,000 dollars pursuant to the Paris Club

agreement on the consolidation of the Kyrgyz Republic's debt.

$ 239,216

2003 Serbia and

Montenegro

In 2003, China agrees to forgive $70 million of the arrears the Serbian oil and gas company Naftna

Industrija Srbije (NIS) owed to Sinochem, a Chinese state-owned company.

$ 70,000,000

2003 Nigeria Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Qiao Zonghuai signs a N325 million debt cancellation agreement

with Nigeria.

$ 2,515,045

2003 Zimbabwe The Chinese government agrees to reschedule a $42 million loan that the Chinese government had

originally provided to the Zimbabwe Iron and Steel Company (ZISCO).

$ 42,000,000

2004 Zimbabwe ExIm Bank officials sign two rescheduling agreements with Zimbabwe for loans totaling $17.9

million US dollars.

$ 17,900,000

2005 Equatorial Guinea Following a visit to China, Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang Nguema referenced

China debt relief but it is unclear when it occurred and the amount involved.

NA

2005 Guinea China cancels Guinea's debt in the amount of $45 million USD. $ 45,000,000

2005 Somalia A Chinese delegation (no further information) waives $3 million of Somalia's debt. $ 3,000,500

2006 Benin During his visit to Benin, Chinese foreign minister Li Zhaoxing agrees to cancel the country’s

debt.

NA

2006 Fiji Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiaboa pledges to cancel Chinese loans to Fiji that matured at the end

of 2005. The value of the debts is unknown.

NA

2006 Georgia At a meeting between Chinese President Hu Jintao and Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili,

China announces it would forgive most of Georgia's $3 million debt.

$ 2,600,000

2006 Laos Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Vientiane and offers assistance and debt forgiveness. $ 45,000,000

2006 Myanmar China and Myanmar sign an agreement for China to cancel 240 million yuan ($30 million) in debt. $ 30,099,938

2006 Samoa Samoa Finance Minister Niko Lee Hang reports that China had forgiven $11.5 million USD of

Samoa's debt.

$ 11,500,000

2006 Senegal China agrees to cancel $18.5-$20 million USD in debt. The exact amount is unclear. $ 18,500,000

2006 Zambia China writes off $211 million of Zambia's debt which was incurred in the 1970s to build the

TAZARA railway line.

$ 211,000,000

2007 Angola The Chinese government signs an agreement with the Angolan government to cancel 50 million

RMB (approximately 7 million USD) of debt owed by the Angolan government.

$ 6,572,433

2007 Burundi During a two-day conference in Burundi, China announces it is cancelling 213 million CNY ($ 28

million) of Burundian debt.

$ 27,998,566

2007 Cameroon Chinese President Hu Jintao agrees to cancel 16 billion CFA of Cameroon's debt to China. $ 32,000,000

2007 Cape Verde Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao announces cancellation of Cape Verde debts that matured at the end

of 2005. No figures disclosed.

NA

2007 Central African Rep. Chinese foreign minister Li Zhaoxing announces in the Central African Republic a debt

cancellation worth 5.5 billion XAF ($11 million USD).

$ 11,475,863

2007 Chad Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing signs a CFA 16 billion debt-relief deal with Chad. $ 33,384,329

2007 Congo, DR China cancels $29 million of outstanding DRC debt $ 29,000,000

2007 Congo, Rep. Republic of Congo and China sign a protocol agreement on the cancellation of 30.6 billion CFA

francs (about 64 million U.S. dollars) of debt owed to China.

$ 64,000,000


2007 Cote D'Ivoire China writes off 40% of the debt owed by Cot d'Ivoire, amounting to 18 million EUR. $ 24,636,020

2007 Equatorial Guinea Chinese foreign minister Li Zhaoxing signs an agreement with Equatorial Guinea to write-off $75

million debt.

$ 75,000,000

2007 Ethiopia Ethiopia and China sign a debt relief agreement for $18.5 million. $ 18,500,000

2007 Ghana China and Ghana sign a series of agreements, including one for debt cancellation worth $126

million USD.

$ 126,000,000

2007 Guinea China promises Guinea debt relief worth $4 million USD. $ 4,000,000

2007 Liberia President Hu Jintao formally signs away 80 million RMB and 1 million USD in Liberian debt owed

to China.

$ 11,000,000

2007 Madagascar Four deals were signed with Madagascar for partial debt cancellation. No amounts were

announced.

2007 Mauritania China forgives $61 million USD worth of Mauritanian debt. $ 61,000,000

2007 Mozambique Chinese President Hu Jintao announces the cancellation of all Mozambican public debt to China

incurred in the period 1980 to 2005. According to Mozambican Finance Minister Manuel Chang,

this debt amounts to about 30 million US dollars.

$ 30,000,000

2007 Rwanda Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Chinese President Hu Jintao sign an agreement canceling

Rwandan debt owed to China 'up through 2005' worth 160 million dollars.

$ 160,000,000

2007 Sierra Leone Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zhai Jun and Sierra Leone's Foreign Minister Zainab Bangura sign

an agreement to cancel $22 million USD worth of Sierra Leone's debt.

$ 22,000,000

2007 Sudan Sudan's President Umar al-Bashir and China's President Hu Jintao sign an agreement for forgiving

part of Sudan's debts due to China amounting to some 470 million RMB (70 million USD).

$ 70,000,000

2007 Tanzania The governments of China and Tanzania agree to forgive payment for 7 interest-free loans. The

value of the debts are not disclosed.

NA

2007 Togo Togolese Foreign Minister Ayeva Zarifou reports that the Chinese government has fulfilled an

agreement to cancel 149 million RMB of debt owed by Togo.

$ 18,687,045

2007 Uganda China's Assistant Minister for Commerce and Uganda's Finance Minister sign an agreement for

China to cancel 17 million USD worth of Uganda's debt.

$ 17,000,000

2007 Zambia The Chinese government cancels Zambia debt worth 8 million USD (60.3 million RMB). $ 8,000,000

2008 Bolivia China's Ambassador signs a debt relief protocol in La Paz. The amount of relief was not reported. NA

2008 Cuba China agrees to postpone the repayment of a part ($7.2 million) of Cuba's debt to China. $ 7,200,000

2008 Kyrgyz Republic The Governments of China and Kyrgyzstan signed an agreement transforming a credit worth $7

million into a grant.

$ 7,000,000

2010 Cambodia Hun Sen, Cambodia's Prime Minister and Wu Bangguo, chairman of the National People' s

Congress, sign an agreement to cancel the 200 million USD debt owed by Cambodia.

$ 200,000,000

2010 Cameroon At the Africa-China Forum, China commits to additional debt cancellation for Cameroon, valued

at CFA 2.1 billion.

$ 4,095,000

2010 Iraq China and Iraq sign an agreement to officially forgive 80% of Iraq's debt---around $6.8 billion

USD.

$ 6,800,000

2010 Sudan The Chinese ambassador to Sudan and Sudanese officials sign an agreement to cancel 40 million

RMB worth of Sudan's debt.

$ 5,908,185

2010 Zimbabwe The Chinese government reaches an agreement with Zimbabwean state-owned steel company

Ziscosteel to reschedule the $54.684 million in debt owed by the Zimbabwean steel producer.

$ 54,684,000

2011 Tanzania, Zambia The Chinese government agrees to write off roughly 50 percent of the $150 million USD owed by

Tazara.

$ 75,000,000

2011 Cote D'Ivoire The Chinese Vice Foreign Minister and Cote d'Ivoire Foreign Minister sign documents that cancel

certain debts. Details were not disclosed.

NA


2011 Cuba China restructures or forgives Cuba's $6 billion debt to China. Details not provided. $ 6,000,000,000

2011 Seychelles China reschedules Seychelles' debt, allowing it to pay its 321 million rand debt over a period of 20

years, with a grace period of 10 years.

$ 44,207,982

2012 Togo China cancels CFA 8.3 billion of Togo's debt. $ 16,061,830

2014 Sudan Sudan's Minister of Finance says the Chinese have offered more time for Khartoum to pay debts

but declines to disclose any further details.

NA

2017 Comoros China announces that it will write off Comorian government debt worth Cfr630m ($1.43m) $ 1,430,000
 
.
Debt relief actions taken by Chinese authorities

Year Country Description Amount (US Dollars)


2000 Vanuatu China agrees to write off 5 million USD of outstanding loan payments from Vanuatu relating to

the construction of a parliamentary complex and law school

$ 5,000,000

2001 Equatorial Guinea Chinese President Jiang Zemin announces an agreement on debt relief for Equatorial Guinea but

no specific amount is mentioned

NA

2001 Cameroon China cancels up to $34 million of Cameroon's debt $ 34,000,000

2001 Ethiopia China cancels $122.56 million of Ethiopian debt. $ 122,560,000

2001 Mali China cancels 37 billion CFA francs worth of Mali debt. $ 49,900,000

2001 Sudan China cancels 63 percent ($40.131 million) of Sudan's $63.7 million debt. $ 40,131,000

2001 Zambia China cancels USD$40 million in Zambian debt. $ 40,000,000

2001 Uganda Ugandan Vice President Wandira Specioza Kazibwe and Chinese Vice President Hu Jintao sign an

agreement for China to cancel 50 million USD of debt.

$ 50,000,000

2001 Burundi Burundi's External Relations and Cooperation Minister and the Chinese ambassador to Burundi

sign an agreement for partial write off of debt worth 38 billion Burundi Francs.

$ 45,722,577

2001 Angola A Chinese economic and trade delegation promises to write off about 10 percent of Angola's $80

million external debt to China during a three-day visit to Luanda.

$ 8,000,000

2001 Congo, Rep. Chinese deputy economy minister Zhang Xiang signs an agreement cancelling $75 million of

maturing debt owed by the Republic of Congo.

$ 75,000,000

2001 Guinea-Bissau China cancels $5.8 million in debts owed by Guinea-Bissau. $ 5,800,000

2001 Niger President Tandja and PM Hama Amadou sign a protocol on forgiving $12 million of Niger's debt

owed to China.

$ 12,000,000

2001 Mozambique Sun Zhenyu, Chinese vice-minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation, announces that

China will write off 22 million US dollars of Mozambique's debt.

$ 22,000,000

2001 Kenya The Chinese government cancels 113 million RMB yuan (about $13.66 million USD) of Kenya's

debts owed to China.

$ 13,652,177

2001 Tanzania The government of China agrees to cancel part of Tanzania's debt with a value of over $70 million. $ 70,877,778

2001 Madagascar The Chinese Assistant Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation and the Madagascar

Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs sign an agreement to reduce USD 30 million of debt (64% of

the total debt owed).

$ 30,000,000

2001 Rwanda Chinese President Jiang Zemin and Rwandan President Paul Kagame signed a debt reduction deal

cancelling loans totaling 113 million yuan.

$ 13,673,924

2001 Lesotho China writes off R40-million debt owed by Lesotho for the construction of a national convention

center.

$ 4,646,203

2002 Afghanistan China agrees to write off all of Afghanistan's debt. $ 19,500,000

2002 Cambodia At the ASEAN summit, Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji announced the cancellation of Cambodia's

debts

$ 200,000,000

2002 Cameroon China and Cameroon agree to reschedule a loan of nearly 4,000 million FCFA (6 million dollars). $ 5,738,978

2002 Ghana China agrees to write off 85 percent of the debt owed by Ghana, the equivalent of $53.5 million

USD.

$ 53,500,000

2002 Myanmar China writes off $72 million of the debt owed by Myanmar to China. $ 72,000,000

2002 Yemen Yemen and China sign an agreement that eliminates 84 million USD out of an outstanding $185

million debt to China.

$ 84,000,000

2003 Bolivia China agrees to forgive debt owed by Bolivia. The amount is not provided. N/A

2003 Ghana China cancels the $66 million USD debt owed by Ghana. $ 66,000,000

2003 Guyana China cancels 20 million USD of loan repayments from Guyana. $ 20,000,000

2003 Eritrea Eritrean Economic Advisor and China's Vice Minister for Foreign Trade and Economic

Cooperation sign a $3m debt cancellation agreement.

$ 3,000,000

2003 Kyrgyz Republic China EXIM restructures Kyrgyzstan's state debt of 250,000 dollars pursuant to the Paris Club

agreement on the consolidation of the Kyrgyz Republic's debt.

$ 239,216

2003 Serbia and

Montenegro

In 2003, China agrees to forgive $70 million of the arrears the Serbian oil and gas company Naftna

Industrija Srbije (NIS) owed to Sinochem, a Chinese state-owned company.

$ 70,000,000

2003 Nigeria Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Qiao Zonghuai signs a N325 million debt cancellation agreement

with Nigeria.

$ 2,515,045

2003 Zimbabwe The Chinese government agrees to reschedule a $42 million loan that the Chinese government had

originally provided to the Zimbabwe Iron and Steel Company (ZISCO).

$ 42,000,000

2004 Zimbabwe ExIm Bank officials sign two rescheduling agreements with Zimbabwe for loans totaling $17.9

million US dollars.

$ 17,900,000

2005 Equatorial Guinea Following a visit to China, Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang Nguema referenced

China debt relief but it is unclear when it occurred and the amount involved.

NA

2005 Guinea China cancels Guinea's debt in the amount of $45 million USD. $ 45,000,000

2005 Somalia A Chinese delegation (no further information) waives $3 million of Somalia's debt. $ 3,000,500

2006 Benin During his visit to Benin, Chinese foreign minister Li Zhaoxing agrees to cancel the country’s

debt.

NA

2006 Fiji Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiaboa pledges to cancel Chinese loans to Fiji that matured at the end

of 2005. The value of the debts is unknown.

NA

2006 Georgia At a meeting between Chinese President Hu Jintao and Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili,

China announces it would forgive most of Georgia's $3 million debt.

$ 2,600,000

2006 Laos Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Vientiane and offers assistance and debt forgiveness. $ 45,000,000

2006 Myanmar China and Myanmar sign an agreement for China to cancel 240 million yuan ($30 million) in debt. $ 30,099,938

2006 Samoa Samoa Finance Minister Niko Lee Hang reports that China had forgiven $11.5 million USD of

Samoa's debt.

$ 11,500,000

2006 Senegal China agrees to cancel $18.5-$20 million USD in debt. The exact amount is unclear. $ 18,500,000

2006 Zambia China writes off $211 million of Zambia's debt which was incurred in the 1970s to build the

TAZARA railway line.

$ 211,000,000

2007 Angola The Chinese government signs an agreement with the Angolan government to cancel 50 million

RMB (approximately 7 million USD) of debt owed by the Angolan government.

$ 6,572,433

2007 Burundi During a two-day conference in Burundi, China announces it is cancelling 213 million CNY ($ 28

million) of Burundian debt.

$ 27,998,566

2007 Cameroon Chinese President Hu Jintao agrees to cancel 16 billion CFA of Cameroon's debt to China. $ 32,000,000

2007 Cape Verde Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao announces cancellation of Cape Verde debts that matured at the end

of 2005. No figures disclosed.

NA

2007 Central African Rep. Chinese foreign minister Li Zhaoxing announces in the Central African Republic a debt

cancellation worth 5.5 billion XAF ($11 million USD).

$ 11,475,863

2007 Chad Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing signs a CFA 16 billion debt-relief deal with Chad. $ 33,384,329

2007 Congo, DR China cancels $29 million of outstanding DRC debt $ 29,000,000

2007 Congo, Rep. Republic of Congo and China sign a protocol agreement on the cancellation of 30.6 billion CFA

francs (about 64 million U.S. dollars) of debt owed to China.

$ 64,000,000


2007 Cote D'Ivoire China writes off 40% of the debt owed by Cot d'Ivoire, amounting to 18 million EUR. $ 24,636,020

2007 Equatorial Guinea Chinese foreign minister Li Zhaoxing signs an agreement with Equatorial Guinea to write-off $75

million debt.

$ 75,000,000

2007 Ethiopia Ethiopia and China sign a debt relief agreement for $18.5 million. $ 18,500,000

2007 Ghana China and Ghana sign a series of agreements, including one for debt cancellation worth $126

million USD.

$ 126,000,000

2007 Guinea China promises Guinea debt relief worth $4 million USD. $ 4,000,000

2007 Liberia President Hu Jintao formally signs away 80 million RMB and 1 million USD in Liberian debt owed

to China.

$ 11,000,000

2007 Madagascar Four deals were signed with Madagascar for partial debt cancellation. No amounts were

announced.

2007 Mauritania China forgives $61 million USD worth of Mauritanian debt. $ 61,000,000

2007 Mozambique Chinese President Hu Jintao announces the cancellation of all Mozambican public debt to China

incurred in the period 1980 to 2005. According to Mozambican Finance Minister Manuel Chang,

this debt amounts to about 30 million US dollars.

$ 30,000,000

2007 Rwanda Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Chinese President Hu Jintao sign an agreement canceling

Rwandan debt owed to China 'up through 2005' worth 160 million dollars.

$ 160,000,000

2007 Sierra Leone Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zhai Jun and Sierra Leone's Foreign Minister Zainab Bangura sign

an agreement to cancel $22 million USD worth of Sierra Leone's debt.

$ 22,000,000

2007 Sudan Sudan's President Umar al-Bashir and China's President Hu Jintao sign an agreement for forgiving

part of Sudan's debts due to China amounting to some 470 million RMB (70 million USD).

$ 70,000,000

2007 Tanzania The governments of China and Tanzania agree to forgive payment for 7 interest-free loans. The

value of the debts are not disclosed.

NA

2007 Togo Togolese Foreign Minister Ayeva Zarifou reports that the Chinese government has fulfilled an

agreement to cancel 149 million RMB of debt owed by Togo.

$ 18,687,045

2007 Uganda China's Assistant Minister for Commerce and Uganda's Finance Minister sign an agreement for

China to cancel 17 million USD worth of Uganda's debt.

$ 17,000,000

2007 Zambia The Chinese government cancels Zambia debt worth 8 million USD (60.3 million RMB). $ 8,000,000

2008 Bolivia China's Ambassador signs a debt relief protocol in La Paz. The amount of relief was not reported. NA

2008 Cuba China agrees to postpone the repayment of a part ($7.2 million) of Cuba's debt to China. $ 7,200,000

2008 Kyrgyz Republic The Governments of China and Kyrgyzstan signed an agreement transforming a credit worth $7

million into a grant.

$ 7,000,000

2010 Cambodia Hun Sen, Cambodia's Prime Minister and Wu Bangguo, chairman of the National People' s

Congress, sign an agreement to cancel the 200 million USD debt owed by Cambodia.

$ 200,000,000

2010 Cameroon At the Africa-China Forum, China commits to additional debt cancellation for Cameroon, valued

at CFA 2.1 billion.

$ 4,095,000

2010 Iraq China and Iraq sign an agreement to officially forgive 80% of Iraq's debt---around $6.8 billion

USD.

$ 6,800,000

2010 Sudan The Chinese ambassador to Sudan and Sudanese officials sign an agreement to cancel 40 million

RMB worth of Sudan's debt.

$ 5,908,185

2010 Zimbabwe The Chinese government reaches an agreement with Zimbabwean state-owned steel company

Ziscosteel to reschedule the $54.684 million in debt owed by the Zimbabwean steel producer.

$ 54,684,000

2011 Tanzania, Zambia The Chinese government agrees to write off roughly 50 percent of the $150 million USD owed by

Tazara.

$ 75,000,000

2011 Cote D'Ivoire The Chinese Vice Foreign Minister and Cote d'Ivoire Foreign Minister sign documents that cancel

certain debts. Details were not disclosed.

NA


2011 Cuba China restructures or forgives Cuba's $6 billion debt to China. Details not provided. $ 6,000,000,000

2011 Seychelles China reschedules Seychelles' debt, allowing it to pay its 321 million rand debt over a period of 20

years, with a grace period of 10 years.

$ 44,207,982

2012 Togo China cancels CFA 8.3 billion of Togo's debt. $ 16,061,830

2014 Sudan Sudan's Minister of Finance says the Chinese have offered more time for Khartoum to pay debts

but declines to disclose any further details.

NA

2017 Comoros China announces that it will write off Comorian government debt worth Cfr630m ($1.43m) $ 1,430,000

All of these loans are minuscule. The recent loans are in billions.
 
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Just convert those RMB loans to digital Rmb. Then reduce the interest rates and extend the duration, walla digital rmb automatically adopted and we can trade with rmb already. Imagine its like monopoly money given so they can be part of the rmb system.
 
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