China Daily Global Edition (USA)

AIIB President Jin: Door will remain open for US to join

- By BLOOMBERG

Despite refusal by Obama, bank pins hopes on closest allies of America who’ve signed up

One year after opening with 57 charter members, the China-led Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank would still welcome the US to join its ranks, the bank’s president Jin Liqun has said.

“The door will remain open,” Jin said in a television interview, when asked whether he expected the US to reconsider becoming a member.

He said: “We maintain a consistent policy. The AIIB is a multilater­al developmen­t institutio­n.”

Approximat­ely 30 economies are waiting to join, Jin said at the bank’s headquarte­rs in Beijing. The lender, with $100 billion of pledged capital — part of China’s push to expand the nation’s economic benefits to others, backed nine projects in seven countries last year.

Before it opened in January 2016, US President Barack Obama rejected joining, only to see several of its closest allies sign up. Now Beijing is preparing for the incomingUS administra­tion of Donald Trump, who’s already straining ties before taking office on Jan 20.

Jin, a former deputy finance minister who also has worked at the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank on China’s behalf, is still optimistic despite recent tensions.

He said: “We can work very well together.”

He added that senior officials in the US government, including both Democrats and Republican­s, have shared with him their praise for the newinstitu­tion.

He said: “I’m encouraged by the very positive comments on the AIIB.”

The AIIB got a boost last year when the UK, Germany, France and Italy became members. Other US allies such as Australia, South Korea and Canada also joined, leaving the US and Japan as the only nations to hold off joining.

The AIIB’s inaugural projects ranged from a slum

Beijing.

Jin Liqun,

If you look at the short-term cyclical recovery, and long-term trend, these two factors seem to be doing pretty well.” president of Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank

upgrading project in Indonesia to a new pipeline linking gas fields in Azerbaijan to markets in southern Europe, via Turkey.

The bank lent $1.73 billion in 2016, exceeding an earlier target of $1.2 billion. Jin said 75 percent of the bank’s projects so far are proposed and co-financed with existing lenders, including the Washington-based World Bank, Manila-based ADB and London-based European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t, while AIIB staff selected the remainder.

The AIIB will continue to collaborat­e closely with those other multilater­al lenders while beefing up its own capability and working to increase its disburseme­nts, according to Jin.

“The pipeline is getting bigger,” and the bank’s priority is to “have a better balance across the regions, countries and sectors,” he said.

Jin, one of the first postgradua­te students to study English literature after China’s cultural revolution (1966 — 76), is fluent in English and French and translated TheHouse ofMorgan, a book on the JP Morgan empire by US author Ron Chernow, into Chinese in 1996. He also served as supervisor­y chairman of the country’s sovereign wealth fund.

Now, he said, he’s confident the country’s economy will fare well during its transition to new drivers of growth.

He said: “China is faced with a number of challenges, particular­ly restructur­ing the economy, moving from excessive dependence on external sectors to domestic consumptio­n, and improving the efficiency of the Chinese economy, not aiming at simply the numbers of the growth.”

Factories and services activities capped a year of strengthen­ing across several indicators. But under the hood, risks remain: Increasing pressure on the yuan, rising capital outflows and concern Trump may make good on threats of punitive measures against China’s exports.

Foreign reserves fell for a sixth month in December, bringing the 2016 drop to $320 billion. The government has recently announced new measures, including extra requiremen­ts for citizens converting yuan into foreign currencies.

Jin said: “Some measure to address this issue in my view probably is necessary. I hope things would stabilize very soon, and panicking on part of investors would disappear.” He said the global economic outlook this year is more positive than last year.

“If you look at the shortterm cyclical recovery, and long-term trend, these two factors seem to be doing pretty well,” Jin said.

“That would in my view favor infrastruc­ture investment both in emerging market economies and in developed countries, which in turn will help sustain growth. It is gratifying to learn that even in the US, they would like to spend more money on infrastruc­ture.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? A hotel employee prepares for the opening ceremony of the first annual meeting of Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank in
REUTERS A hotel employee prepares for the opening ceremony of the first annual meeting of Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank in
 ??  ?? the amount that AIIB lent in 2016, exceeding an earlier target of $1.2 billion
the amount that AIIB lent in 2016, exceeding an earlier target of $1.2 billion

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States