Global Times - Weekend

Africans understand how China benefits them

- By Humphrey P. B. Moshi The author is professor of economics at Tanzania’s leading state-run University of Dar es Salaam. opinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Saturday will wrap up his six-day visit to five African countries including Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania, Botswana and Seychelles.

The visit is timed for two major reasons. First, it coincides with the 20th Anniversar­y of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n (FOCAC). It needs to be recalled that from its founding in 2000, trade between China and African countries has grown more than 20 times, hitting $208.7 billion in 2019 from a meager $10 billion in 2000. China has been Africa’s leading partner for the past 11 years. Further, China’s stock of direct investment in Africa has reached $110 billion with nearly 4,000 Chinese enterprise­s setting up plants and businesses across the continent. They have thus created employment opportunit­ies, transferri­ng technology and promoting people-to-people exchanges. Therefore, the visit will definitely cement and consolidat­e this relationsh­ip for a better and brighter future for the two sides.

Second, the year 2020, which witnessed the spread of coronaviru­s worldwide, with its devastatin­g economic, social and live-loss effects, has discourage­d face-to-face contacts among countries. But it has encouraged virtual encounters. Indeed, the visit is a testimony to the fact that at least the COVID-19 is becoming more manageable.

But more importantl­y, it is a critical platform for charting out a post-COVID-19 agenda that will inform the future of the relationsh­ip between China and Africa. Specifical­ly, issues of strengthen­ing the public health systems in Africa have to feature more prominentl­y in the future agenda, including issues of the digitizati­on of economies.

Tanzania-China relations have always have been cordial in all dimensions. All indicators ranging from trade, direct investment, developmen­t aid, to people-to-people exchanges, are trending upward. Some said Wang’s visit to Tanzania aims to repair ties affected by the suspending of major Chinese projects in Tanzania. But the subject of repairing ties is out of context at this point in time.

China’s competitiv­eness has increased on the world arena, both socially and economical­ly. And this has been good news for Africa and other developing countries because they have a richer menu to choose from in their search for developmen­t inputs; be they policies, strategies and finance.

In pursuit of that choice, most of the African countries have looked for China for a number of reasons. China has never been a colonizer and did work hand in hand with Africa in its demand for political independen­ce and fighting imperialis­m (recall the Bandung Conference 1956). Most of what China offers to Africa in the context of their cooperatio­n is to a great extent aligned with Africa’s developmen­t aspiration­s. For example, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

Indeed, in the course of the unfolding competitio­n, most Western countries have been pushed aside. This being the case, they have to cook up stories to justify their being losers. The perception that China is or may lose Africa is likewise not grounded in facts given the mutual benefits which accrue to both sides.

There are a number of lessons learnt from the pandemic which need to be incorporat­ed into the China-Africa cooperatio­n in order to sustain the cooperatio­n in a dynamic world environmen­t.

First, the need to focus on the “Silk Road of Health.” The incorporat­ion of this component into the BRI would go a long way in putting in place a global architectu­re for planning the responses, managing and mitigating the impact of future pandemics. The main beneficiar­ies of this added component would be African countries, given the fragility of their public health systems.

Second, the need to focus on a “Digital Silk Road.” Indeed, to the extent that technology has been the blood nerves and arteries of economies during the COVID-19 pandemic, the post-pandemic developmen­t has to likewise continue relying more heavily on and developing even farther the requisite technologi­es.

Surely, with this in mind, scaling-up cooperatio­n in the digital economy, promotion of e-commerce, smart cities and other applicatio­ns of digital technology is an imperative. This key endeavor must be coupled with the use of artificial intelligen­ce and big data technology.

If Africa were to be effectivel­y empowered, through the cooperatio­n with China, to tap into these areas, the continent will not only realize a quick recovery of their economies from the pandemic, but also narrow its domestic and external digital divide significan­tly.

 ??  ?? Page Editor: liaixin@globaltime­s.com.cn
Page Editor: liaixin@globaltime­s.com.cn

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