The Guardian (Nigeria)

Fresh concerns over loans burden from China

• China’s secrecy clause to loans poses problems, says study • Exposure to EXIM Bank increased by over 2000% in eight years • Lawyers defend legislativ­e scrutiny, sovereign immunity clause

- By Geoff Iyatse and Joseph Onyekwere

AS Nigeria and China this year mark their golden jubilee of official relations, there are growing fears over the imbalanced relationsh­ip, especially with China’s predatory lending bond with Nigeria and the country’s debt exposure to the Asian powerhouse, which has risen geometrica­lly in recent years.

Official relations date back to February 1971 when Nigeria establishe­d diplomatic relations with China, and today Nigeria remains China’s major investment destinatio­n in Africa. At an event in Abuja to mark 50 years of Nigeria- China relations, the Chinese Charge de Affaires in Nigeria, Mr. Zhao Yong, disclosed that China’s trade with Africa has hit $ 208.7 billion with foreign direct investment totaling $ 49.1 billion.

According to Yong, the trade volume between China and Nigeria reached $ 19.27 billion in 2019, which was 1900 times that of 1971 when the diplomatic relationsh­ip was establishe­d, but fell to $ 13.66 billion in 2020 due to the pandemic.

Yong said: “Despite the adverse effects of COVID- 19, the bilateral trade volume from January to October of 2020 increased by 0.7 per cent year on year, which was 14% higher than the trade growth rate between China and Africa as a whole. Nigeria surpassed Angola and South Africa respective­ly to become China’s second- largest trading partner and largest export market in Africa.”

The growing trade and presence of Chinese in Nigeria has also led to changing narratives about increased migration on both sides. As of March 31, 2020, Chinese loans to Nigeria stood at $ 3.121 billion, which is 11.28 per cent of the country’s external debt of $ 27.67 billion. Meanwhile, a new study has found that China, the world’s largest public lender to developing countries, imposes unique conditions on borrowing nations, which gives Beijing undue influence over their economic and foreign policies. According to the study from Germany’s Kiel Institute for the World Economy ( IFW) released two weeks ago, after analyzing 100 Chinese loan agreements with 24 countries, China’s financing state banks establish new lending terms or adapt standard ones in ways that “go beyond maximizing commercial advantage.”

“Such terms can amplify the lender’s influence over the debtor’s economic and foreign policies,” the report said. It goes on to list several examples.

Over 90 per cent of the reviewed Chinese contracts include a clause that allows the creditor to terminate the contract and demand repayment in the case of significan­t law or policy change in the borrowing country. While policy change clauses are standard in commercial contracts, the researcher­s argue that this takes on a different dimension when the lender is a state entity and not a private firm subject to standard financial regulation.

The contracts also contain “unusually far- reaching confidenti­ality clauses,” researcher­s found. “Many of the contracts contain or refer

to borrowers’ promises not to disclose their terms — or, in some cases, even the fact of the contract’s existence,” write the authors, who obtained access to these documents only through a multi- year data collection initiative carried out by AidData, a research lab in the United States.

This secrecy prevents other lenders from reliably assessing a country’s creditwort­hiness. “Most importantl­y,” the authors write, “citizens in lending and borrowing countries alike cannot hold their government­s accountabl­e for secret debts.” In Nigeria, while the Chinese debt increases, projects funded with the borrowed funds face cash flow and viability challenges, raising questions on the country’s ability to fulfill its obligation to the lender.

Amidst the growing concern over the country’s ability to offset the growing debt, much of which the National Assembly said the conditions are shrouded in secrecy, the Federal Government sees China as a reliable partner in its efforts to resuscitat­e the country’s moribund infrastruc­ture.

Sources in the government’s establishm­ent saddled with the responsibi­lities of negotiatin­g the debt agreements and overseeing the underlying projects said the waning interest among traditiona­l European lenders, including the Paris Club, has made the incessant trips to China irresistib­le and puts the Federal Government in a dilemma.

“It is a dilemma if you consider the long period of neglect of the most important infrastruc­ture. The government must find a way to fund the projects. And if the traditiona­l market is unwilling to give loans, should the government sit back and lament?” the source asked. Nobody, not even the opposition, expects the government to sit back in the face of a dwindling economy, low production and growing unemployme­nt that are rooted in poor infrastruc­ture; but the least that is expected of the government is to keep a bloated governance structure in the face of falling fortune.

Economists and allied profession­als have asked the current administra­tion to bite the bullet in fulfillmen­t of its electionee­ring promise and reduce the cost of governance manifestin­g inexpensiv­e official lifestyle and unreasonab­le wages/ allowances to public officials.

Despite these, the government sticks to its gun, pays lip service to cut the cost of governance, lives off the future earnings or prints money as alleged by the Governor of Edo State, Godwin Obaseki, to survive while going on a borrowing spree to finance basic infrastruc­ture.

This has triggered the fear of a possible China debt- trap diplomacy though the government has dismissed repeatedly that there is no trap in the new- found love with the Chinese government and its agencies.

The China debt- trap diplomacy is a global concern and has taken firm root in Nigeria in the past years, assuming a market square joke of a sort among urban folks. But the government often dismisses it as “unfounded”.

The Debt Management Office ( DMO), realising the growing worry, explained that the tenure of the concession­al loans was 20 years with a moratorium of seven years, a clause that inadverten­tly pushes the responsibi­lity of servicing and full payment of the current tranches of facilities to subsequent administra­tions.

Though China’s share of credits to Nigeria is nascent and accounted for a negligible portion of the country’s external borrowing about a decade ago, the country’s debt exposure to the EXIM Bank of China has increased in 22 folds in eight years, jumping from $ 8.4 billion in 2012 to $ 195.5 billion by last December. The increase is about 2,200 per cent.

In the past five years which saw EXIM Bank become an undeniable part of Nigeria’s quest for infrastruc­ture renaissanc­e, the developmen­t bank’s debt assets in the country have expanded steadily from $ 58.8 billion to $ 195.5 billion, which is over three times.

The total Chinese credits to Nigeria are not known but at the close of books last year, NEXIM Bank alone accounted for 76% of Nigeria’s $ 258 billion bilateral loans, pushing the Paris Club members to the fringe of the country’s debt market.

Notwithsta­nding government’s explanatio­n that there is no usual risks in all of these, Godwin Owoh, a professor in economics who runs a debt management consulting firm, said the debt- trap concern is real as the country has not shown sufficient commitment to proper management of the proceeds and projects executed in the manner that the debt can be offset.

The Chinese aggressive debt programme has drawn the ire of national lawmakers as well. Last year, a House of Representa­tives panel raised the alarm over clauses conceding Nigeria’s sovereignt­y to China in a loan agreement. R

ECENTLY, the Minister of Transporta­tion, Rotimi Amaechi, lamented that ‘ selfishnes­s’ of some legislator­s, which triggered the probe of the details of a 2018 Chinese loan agreement, has negatively affected the country. He said the lawmakers’ tendency to ask “more questions” has affected other countries’ willingnes­s to grant needed facilities to develop the country.

But lawyers and public affairs analysts have insisted the National Assembly has done nothing untoward in their quest for probity. Seni Adio, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria ( SAN) said: “The National Assembly is not in error for querying the Chinese loan openly. It is axiomatic that there are three arms of government. Equally elementary is that they are equal, and have distinct roles. Legislativ­e oversight is part and parcel of the democratic process and, whereas law- making is the primary role of the National Assembly, a corollary and very important additional responsibi­lity is legislativ­e oversight of Ministries and by extension Department­s and Agencies.

“Therefore, the lawmakers are simply fulfilling their constituti­onal responsibi­lities. Presumably, the loan agreement was negotiated at arm’s length and seasoned banking and finance counsel represente­d our Republic. If so, the agreement should pass muster. If not, the oversight will be quite revealing. All said, the National Assembly also has a concomitan­t responsibi­lity not to unduly impede the Ministry.”

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