BusinessMirror

Investment in Belt and Road countries jumps on tech deals

-

CHINA’S investment in the countries along the Belt and Road rose to the highest since 2019, with much of that increase due to a new battery plant for electric vehicles.

Investment in the 147 nations in the BRI rose 63 percent to $32.5 billion from a year earlier, according to a report from Fudan University in Shanghai. Driving the rise was China’s Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co. and Mercedes-benz Group AG plans to invest more than $7 billion in a plant in Hungary, the biggest single project in any BRI country since it started in 2013.

After the tech sector, the energy sector was the largest recipient of Chinese investment, with $9 billion going into projects, mostly for oil, gas and green energy. Chinese firms also signed more than $15 billion in constructi­on deals for the energy sector and another $12 billion for transport infrastruc­ture such as ports, roads and railways, according to the report from Christoph Nedopil at Fudan’s Green Finance & Developmen­t Center.

Total constructi­on deals fell 27 percent to $35.3 billion, lowest level since the start of the initiative spearheade­d by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Hungary was the largest recipient of Chinese investment among BRI nations, followed by Saudi Arabia and Singapore. Russia, Angola, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Peru saw no new investment or constructi­on deals, while engagement in Pakistan fell 34 percent, and that in sub-saharan Africa also dropped by double digits, the report showed.

Chinese lending to a number of nations has fallen during the pandemic as an increasing number of borrowers in Africa and elsewhere have either defaulted on their debts or requested debt restructur­ing. Pakistan was in talks this week with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund for a resumption of a $6.5 billion bailout and Sri Lanka is moving closer to a restructur­ing deal.

Lending by China’s top two developmen­t banks slowed in 2020 and 2021, according to separate research.

The value of constructi­on contracts should roughly track the value of overseas projects that are funded with Chinese loans, while the investment figure tracks overseas projects where Chinese companies have an equity stake, according to the report’s author.

As there is a possible overlap between the two and because some Chinese constructi­on contracts will be for projects funded by other countries, the report tracks “engagement” in the BRI, not the total Chinese financing of BRI projects.

Total engagement in 2022 was $67.8 billion according to the report, slightly lower than the $68.7 billion in 202.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines