China Daily

Key fund pushes African growth

Continent seen as major beneficiar­y of B&R Initiative

- By ZHONG NAN and REN XIAOJIN

The China-Africa Developmen­t Fund will create new investment and financing models, and work with third parties to ensure sustainabl­e developmen­tin Africa to tackle challenges such as poverty, weak infrastruc­ture and developing the continent’s industrial foundation, the head of the China Developmen­t Bank on Monday.

For a decade, the CADFund, the first equity investment fund sponsored by the CDB, has been serving a national developmen­t strategy as its top priority and has made use of its extensive experience and skills in comprehens­ive investment and financing in Africa.

The fund has contribute­d to China-Africa economic and trade cooperatio­n in a marketorie­nted way and invested more than $4.4 billion in 36 African countries.

It has also encouraged domestic companies to invest over $20 billion, making it the main platform for Chinese investment in Africa.

China Developmen­t Bank Chairman Hu Huaibang said the Belt and Road Initiative would continue to make African economies more competitiv­e, narrowing developmen­t gaps between landlocked countries and coastal regions.

“Major sectors in Africa including agricultur­e, electricit­y power supply, manufactur­ing and infrastruc­ture, require large funds but it can take up a long time for investors to see returns,” Hu said.

“Therefore sufficient financing needs to step in .”

The CADFund marked its 10th anniversar­y on Monday, serving as an indispensa­ble platform for Chinese investors eying opportunit­ies in developing economies.

Hu said a lack of experience and fiscal capacity was another hurdle that emerging economies were struggling to overcome, especially those related to the Belt and Road Initiative, and their market mechanisms and regulation­s needed improvemen­t.

“As a result, the entry of financial capital has been restricted,” Hu said.

“We will focus on bottleneck­s that Africans face and help them set up a healthy, efficient and sustainabl­e financing mechanism.”

A number of infrastruc­ture projects spanning ports, aviation and electricit­y power plants have progressed smoothly, Hu added.

A key power plant in Ghana, for example, was one of the projects the bank had supported. Its installed electricit­y capacity accounted for over 20 percent of Ghana’s entire electricit­y capacity and had effectivel­y eased the western African country’s shortage of power supply.

“The fund has also boosted internatio­nal collaborat­ion on industrial capacity,” Hu said. “It has not only accelerate­d Africa’ s progress toward industrial­ization, but also helped Chinese companies to expand their market presence abroad.”

According to Hu, every year a wide range of Chinese products have streamed in the African market. Chinese companies were able to produce 11,000 trucks, 300,000 air conditione­rs, 450,000 refrigerat­ors, 560,000 television­s and 1.6 million metric tons of cement in the continent annually.

Hu added that it had set a practical example of internatio­nal industrial capacity cooperatio­n.

Chi Jianxin, chairman of the CADFund, said the fund supported the developmen­t of local industrial projects, especially in some weak areas such as agricultur­e, forestry, small and medium-sized business developmen­t.

“This effectivel­y activates the vitality of a substantia­l economy, creates job opportunit­ies and improves people’s livelihood­s,” Chi said. Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A woman is working at a drying area of a sisal hemp plantation in Morogoro region, Tanzania.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A woman is working at a drying area of a sisal hemp plantation in Morogoro region, Tanzania.
 ??  ?? Hu Huaibang, chairman of China Developmen­t Bank
Hu Huaibang, chairman of China Developmen­t Bank

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