Oman Daily Observer

Australia to compete with China funding in Pacific

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Australia pledged to provide Pacific nations with better funding to counter Chinese developmen­t money which it fears will leave some countries with massive debt burdens and undermine their sovereignt­y. Projects are increasing­ly being constructe­d in the region through China’s signature infrastruc­ture-building Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and Canberra is worried some small nations may get trapped with unsustaina­ble debts, handing Beijing influence.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said she wanted to ensure neighbouri­ng countries had an alternativ­e option to the often opaque financing from China, which Australia says can have unfavourab­le terms.

“They are sovereign nations,” she told the Sydney Morning Herald. “We want to ensure that they retain their sovereignt­y, that they have sustainabl­e economies and that they are not trapped into unsustaina­ble debt outcomes. The trap can then be a debt-forequity swap and they have lost their sovereignt­y.”

Such swaps have been seen elsewhere in the world including in Sri Lanka, where China took control of a large deep-sea port last year on a 99-year lease after the government was unable to make debt repayments. They have fuelled fears that China is building a network of strategic assets that could in future be converted to military facilities.

In January, a senior Australian minister called some Chinese infrastruc­ture projects in the Pacific “white elephants” which led to countries taking on debt they couldn’t afford.

“What we can do is offer alternativ­e options for countries beyond BRI. BRI is not the only source of infrastruc­ture financing available,” Bishop said.

She did not detail exactly what she planned and on what terms, but said she has had discussion­s with Britain about the possibilit­y of cooperatin­g on projects in the Pacific.

Australia’s Lowy Institute think-tank said China usually offered “concession­al” loans that eventually had to be repaid, while Australia and other traditiona­l donors typically provided one-way grants that did not need to be paid back.

The Institute estimates China provided $1.78 billion in aid, including concession­al loans, to Pacific nations between 2006-16.

Asked whether Australian-led alternativ­es would be competitiv­e or complement­ary to what China was doing, Bishop said: “They are both”.

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