The Phnom Penh Post

Belt and Road could bring risks for Kingdom debt

- Robin Spiess

CHINA’S financing of Belt and Road Initiative projects in Cambodia could lead to increased debt distress, according to a recent analysis, though the Kingdom’s low overall debt makes it unlikely to default in the near future.

According to a policy paper released by the Center for Global Developmen­t, Cambodia will likely see a significan­t rise in debt to China as a result of the Belt and Road Initiative. At the end of 2016, Cambodia’s total public and publicly guaranteed debt was $6.5 billion, a relatively low percent of the country’s $20 billion GDP. About half of that $6.5 billion debt was owed to China, according to the report.

Miguel Chanco, lead Southeast Asia analyst for the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit (EIU), noted that the report was accurate regarding the risks to Cambodia, but also said any prediction of future debt levels was complicate­d by the overall lack of transparen­cy of BRI projects.

“Our estimates put the country’s public debt stock at around 35 percent of GDP, which is well below the median for Asean and emerging markets at large,” Chanco said. “Having said that, I am concerned about the lack of transparen­cy in many of China’s projects in Cambodia, as it makes it difficult to determine the latter’s overall sovereign debt commitment­s.”

The report also makes note of the uncertaint­y of potential BRI projects. While publicly declared projects at the end of 2016 were predicted to leave Cambodia indebted to China by an additional $3.5 billion, the report’s “Limitation­s of Methodolog­y” section notes that number could end up being much higher.

For example, China has proposed a plan to “develop over two million kilometers of national expressway­s [in Cambodia] by 2040”, which would cost an estimated $26 billion and could leave the Kingdom significan­tly more in debt to China.

The EIU forecasted a rapid rise in Cambodia’s external debt in the next few years, according to Chanco.

“We expect the country’s total foreign debt stock to rise to $17 billion by 2020,” he said.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? Xi Jinping, president of China, and Prime Minister Hun Sen shake hands in October 2016.
HONG MENEA Xi Jinping, president of China, and Prime Minister Hun Sen shake hands in October 2016.

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