China Daily

CADF to guide more capital into Africa for infrastruc­ture, agricultur­e developmen­t

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BEIJING — Over the past 10 years, a Chinese developmen­t fund has invested billions of dollars in Africa. Chi Jianxin, chairman of the China-Africa Developmen­t Fund (CADF), told Xinhua in an interview that the fund has $4.5 billion to invest in 91 projects in 36 countries, with more than $3.2 billion having already been invested.

“After the completion of all projects, the fund will channel more than $20 billion from Chinese companies into Africa,” Chi said.

To support Chinese companies in Africa, the fund was set up in 2007 following the 2006 Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n.

The initial scale of the fund was $5 billion, and the total was expanded to $10 billion in 2015. It has invested in fields including infrastruc­ture, production capacity cooperatio­n and agricultur­e.

After completion, the projects will produce 11,000 trucks, 300,000 air conditione­rs, 540,000 refrigerat­ors, 390,000 television­s and 1.6 million metric tons of cement each year, raising Africa’s exports by $2 billion and taxation income by $1 billion every year, Chi said.

“Different from aid or loans, the fund guides more capital into Africa with its own investment,” he added.

This approach has been welcomed, as it allows countries to push forward the projects without any increase in debt burden and raises their own developmen­t capacity, Chi said.

In the past few years, Africa has generally been politicall­y stable with fast economic growth, more urban residents and middle-class consumers, and a rising appetite for consumer goods.

Many African countries enjoy geographic­al advantages, low labor costs and a good trade environmen­t. They are well-positioned for internatio­nal industrial cooperatio­n.

“Africa’s infrastruc­ture, manufactur­ing and agricultur­al fields have continued sound developmen­t and have huge potential, so we are upbeat about prospects,” he said.

The fund plans to make more investment and direct more capital into Africa under the Belt and Road Initiative and Chinese policies on internatio­nal production capacity and equipment manufactur­ing cooperatio­n.

In the process, the fund has taken an open attitude toward the cooperatio­n with non-African countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons, as it sees supporting African developmen­t as “the joint responsibi­lity of the internatio­nal community,” Chi said.

The fund has reached agreement with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on investment in agricultur­al and pharmaceut­ical sectors, and signed a memorandum of understand­ing on investment and exports with the UK Department for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n.

It is also exploring cooperatio­n with other partners, including the World Bank, the United Nations Industrial Developmen­t Organizati­on and the African Developmen­t Bank.

In this way, the fund not only invests in Africa, but also helps African products meet the demands of the global market, which will in turn create jobs and expand exports, Chi said.

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