Stabroek News Sunday

Rebalancin­g the Chinese economic relationsh­ip

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Last month the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank (IDB) published a paper ‘Chinese rise in the Caribbean - What does it mean for Caribbean Stakeholde­rs?’ Although, in its conclusion­s, it said little more than a number of Caribbean commentato­rs have observed previously, it is important for three reasons.

Firstly, it disaggrega­tes the Caribbean from the more usual approach whereby multilater­al institutio­ns write or speak about China in the context of the Americas, as if Latin America and the Caribbean were some coherent entity; secondly, the research-based study focuses on the economic benefits that might accrue from a more strategic approach; and thirdly, it encourages the region to be forward looking about what it wants out of its long-term relationsh­ip with Beijing.

The paper’s two authors make the point from the Caribbean’s perspectiv­e, that while China potentiall­y represents a new export destinatio­n, an alternativ­e source of capital, and a new source of tourists, the region must do more to take advantage of such opportunit­ies. They observe that while the Caribbean’s relationsh­ip with China - an IDB member since 2009 - may appear to be symbiotic, nations in the region should be taking steps to ensure greater reciprocal benefit.

They also suggest that the Caribbean needs to determine how to respond if Chinese interest in the Caribbean region lessens as a result of Beijing restructur­ing its economic policy to accommodat­e slowing, but still remarkable, five to seven per cent annual GDP growth; its increasing­ly consumptio­n rather than investment­driven domestic economy; and its growing emphasis on exporting higher value manufactur­ed goods and technology.

Such changes, the paper suggests, will require Caribbean nations to make themselves more competitiv­e and globally attractive through undertakin­g the structural reforms necessary to become a manufactur­ing platform, a logistical hub, and a premier tourist destinatio­n for higherinco­me Chinese.

The report’s findings parallel other recent commentari­es from hemispheri­c and multilater­al bodies.

These suggest that China’s present, often starkly asymmetric economic relationsh­ip with the countries of the Latin American and Caribbean region, needs to change. They argue that what is required is a new approach that is developmen­tally more equitable, and which supports the closer integratio­n of the countries of the region into the global supply chain through the transfer of technology, and by adding local value.

Achieving such an outcome for the Caribbean in the immediate future is likely to be challengin­g. This is because cashstrapp­ed Caribbean government­s caught in short electoral cycles may find it difficult to argue for long-term local valueadded or market access against a background of Chinese investment­s that promise employment, foreign exchange and tourism taxes.

The matter is made complicate­d as typically, such investment arrangemen­ts involve state-to-state facilitati­on, state or quasi-state Chinese entities, loans to Chinese private-sector entities from statelinke­d banks, and sometimes limited competitio­n. In addition, there are often associated side deals with Caribbean government­s offering, for example, land, tax breaks, duty waivers, citizenshi­p, or other longer term arrangemen­ts likely in total to lessen the overall value of local content or the ultimate local return.

Put another way the short term benefits for government­s are clear, they offer a means to spur growth and increase public sector revenues, but they provide little incentive to develop new initiative­s of the kind the IDB and others envisage.

This is not meant in any way to downplay the importance of Chinese investment­s, but to observe that their complexity not only makes their full long-term domestic economic benefits far from easy to quantify, but also potentiall­y acts as a constraint on developing a more equitable long-term economic relationsh­ip.

Irrespecti­ve, Chinese investment in the region is continuing to grow. On July 19 the Jamaican government announced that the Alpart alumina refinery in Jamaica had been sold by the Russian industrial giant, Rusal for US$299m to the Chinese state owned entity the Jiuquan Iron and Steel Company (JISCo). The company is expected to make a first phase investment of around US$220m to enhance production and reduce costs in November and plans to invest another US$1.5b to establish an industrial zone co-located with the alumina facility.

The acquisitio­n, which will make JISCo one of the top 10 producers of aluminium in China, follows other signs that China, with cautious Jamaican government support, sees the country becoming a hemispheri­c Chinese enterprise hub. The approach involves first supporting the upgrading of the country’s infrastruc­ture and then making use of its strategic location, deep sea facilities and workforce to competitiv­ely assemble, tranship and access the US, Latin American and other markets.

Another quite different developmen­t was announced by the St Lucia Government on July 29 when it signed with a Hong Kong related company a US$2.6b agreement to build what has been described as “the country’s first internatio­nal standard integrated tourism developmen­t”. This involves the constructi­on of a resort to be known as Pearl of the Caribbean on a 700-acre site to the south of the island, related to St Lucia’s recently introduced Citizenshi­p by Investment programme. Unusually the principal investor, who has an existing commercial horse breeding industry in Ordos in Inner Mongolia, reportedly sees opportunit­y in the region arising out of China’s rapidly growing equine industry that is linked closely to racing and gambling. The developmen­t, which also includes a free trade zone, is expected to appeal to Chinese, South East Asian and Russian investors and visitors. It follows other Chinese related tourism mega-projects in the region, such as the still-to-open US$3.5b Baha Mar resort in the Bahamas and the planned US$1b resort developmen­t on and around Guiana Island off Antigua.

These and other developmen­ts suggest that China’s much to be valued economic engagement with the region may eventually supplant the once pervasive economic role of traditiona­l partners.

The IDB report is of significan­ce as it demonstrat­es the need for greater economic balance in future in the region’s relationsh­ip with China.

It and other commentari­es imply that if the Caribbean is to retain its much prized independen­ce, it will be important in the longer term that Chinese investment is balanced by the developmen­t of an indigenous and vibrant export-oriented Caribbean private sector with some form of preferenti­al access to the vast Chinese market, plus Chinese provision for developmen­t programmes for Caribbean goods and services.

Without such support, there is a danger that China’s rise could pose a longer term threat to Caribbean economic sovereignt­y and indigenous enterprise.

Previous columns be www.caribbean-council.org found at

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