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Why US criticism of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor will fall on deaf ears

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Eye on Asia by Hannan Hussain

Why US criticism of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor will fall on deaf ears
  • US warnings of debt trap, job losses and economic toll will go unheeded as Pakistan soaks up China’s concessionary loans in a project that aims to fundamentally improve its economic prospects

Hannan Hussain


Published: 3:00pm, 15 Dec, 2019

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Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan meets Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on October 9. Photo: Xinhua

Washington’s critique of theChina-Pakistan Economic Corridor
(CPEC) is becoming a bit predictable. Alice Wells, the top United States diplomat for South Asia,reiterated the Trump leadership’s long-term position on the project last month: aid is an illusion, Pakistan is headed for a debt trap, and Beijing will consolidate all profits.
Interestingly, what began as a warning quickly transpired into a proposition: US multinational engagement in Pakistan should increase. But as long as Washington overlooks the key consistencies in the Sino-Pakistan bilateral engagement, its view on the economic corridor is unlikely to make gains with Islamabad.

First, Pakistan’s repayments to China are stretched over 20 years
, a timeline aligned with the corridor’s prospective operations. According to official documents with the Ministry of Planning, total payments amount to US$39 billion – where US$28 billion account for infrastructure and energy projects, and US$11 billion account for dividends (a sum extracted out of profits).
These specifics contest Well’s assertion that the “bulk of payments start to come due in the next four to six years”, and that “the corridor is going to take a growing toll on the Pakistan economy”.

Moreover, what frequently escapes American discourse is how Pakistan and China manage their deferrals. For instance, many of the deferred project investments under CPEC are marked by concessionary loans – designed to suit Pakistan’s revenue generation limitations.

The same is the case with bilateral loans and grants. Beijing has pushed across
billions this year to bolster Islamabad’s dwindling cash reserves and socio-economic challenges. This judicious tailoring of investments to Pakistan’s economic limitations – a long-standing hallmark of Sino-Pakistan cooperation – is largely absent in Pakistan’s experience with the US.

Interestingly, many within the Trump administration are of the view that Pakistan is pushing itself into a “client-state” spot with Beijing, with Beijing the chief financier and thus entitled to asymmetrical leverage. What this fails to consider is that the corridor’s development is itself an attempt to upgrade Pakistan’s revenue generation capacity.

How the US is turning Pakistan into a Chinese colony
Still the remarks should not strike Islamabad as a total surprise. The Trump administration has argued its case on CPEC far more erroneously in the past. Last year, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo allegedthat Pakistan’s pursuit of an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout was an attempt to pay back Chinese loans. “There’s no rationale for IMF tax dollars, and associated with that American dollars that are part of the IMF funding, for those to go to bail out Chinese bondholders or China itself,” said Pompeo.

The allegations, dismissed by the IMF as false, were a direct reference to Chinese investments under the corridor project. Earlier, former US state secretary Rex Tillerson went on record to question the financial structure of projects under CPEC. Another odd probe into an inherently bilateral settlement.

President Donald Trump has been very open about America’s reservations with China. At the United Nations, he accused Beijing of undermining free trade through
currency manipulation, forced technology transfers and massive market barriers. All these fit into Trump’s self-initiated trade war with Beijing, designed to boost his protectionist domestic image.

The understanding now is that Islamabad too should embrace some of these protectionist policies towards Beijing. “CPEC relies primarily on Chinese workers and supplies, even amid rising unemployment in Pakistan,” Wells warned last month. The remark enjoys strong parallels with President Trump’s State of the Union address in February, alleging Chinese
“theft” of American jobs.

Washington’s view that CPEC is destined to backfire appears unconvincing on many counts. Little suggests that Chinese investment has been dismissive of Pakistan’s economic challenges, or that Pakistan prefers a cynical approach to regional connectivity and integration in its neighbourhood.

Hannan Hussain is a security analyst at the London School of Economics’s South Asia Centre, and an author
 
He missed the most important point. Which is most of the loan is "built-operate-earn" bases with risk covered by Chinese government.

That is Chinese built the power plant, people buy electricity and Chinese earn some profit etc. If no profit and Chinese lose all their investment due to say no body buying electricity, its their problem. Pakistani government has to pay nothing back

SO far for the all the projects approved the only repayable loan is less than 4.9 billion (easily google-able). This is payable over 20 years.

It is anticipated that by 2030 Pakistan growth rate would be in double digit thanks to Chinese industry relocating some of their industry along with other investments from the rest of world.
 
He missed the most important point. Which is most of the loan is "built-operate-earn" bases with risk covered by Chinese government.

the chinese government took no risk for the Hambonta port. Neither are they going to take anything for your power plants.

the pakistani rate payers are on the hook for the power plants. they are already on the hook for the independent non-chinese power producers. there is no surprise here

the bigger point is whether the availability of power and motorways will lead to increased economic activity
 

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