Mail & Guardian

Brics bank fails to live up to hype

The New Developmen­t Bank is facing questions about the transparen­cy and fairness of its loans

- Thulebona Mhlanga

The New Developmen­t Bank (NDB), the financing arm of the Brics (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) bloc, is ready to provide $8-billion for infrastruc­ture in South Africa — but critics say the bank has so far failed key tests, especially that of transparen­cy.

There are also concerns that most of the loans to date have been dollar denominate­d, exposing the borrower to currency risk. They also do not appear to have been concession­al, and there are fears that not enough due diligence was done in granting a recent loan to Transnet.

The vice-president of the NDB, Leslie Maasdorp, told the Mail & Guardian at the bank’s recent annual meeting in Shanghai that the $8-billion will be allocated to fund South Africa’s infrastruc­ture gap.

The NDB, led by new board chairperso­n Nhlanhla Nene, has announced total funding of $5-billion for projects in Brics countries. Transnet has been given a $200-million loan to rehabilita­te the Durban port’s container terminals and increase their capacity.

But Professor Lumkile Mondi of the University of Witwatersr­and says the NDB has not lived up to expectatio­ns, and transparen­cy is a concern.

“We are very worried about how this bank is operating because even that loan given to Transnet recently was not made very public. When there is a loan in process at the World Bank, there is a record that stateowned company ‘X’ has applied for a loan and discussion­s are under way.

“They [the NDB] must be transparen­t and be in partnershi­p with South Africans, because we need to ensure that the money in our state-owned companies is being used legitimate­ly for developmen­t and is not repurposed,” Mondi says.

He also questions whether South Africa is holding its NDB partner China to account. With the Brics summit due to take place in Johannesbu­rg next month, at which South Africa will take over the chairmansh­ip, Mondi says it could be an opportunit­y for the country to review its role in the group.

“Our membership in Brics may seem as though we are complacent about China’s behaviour on the continent. It has not created any number of jobs but instead it has brought a shipful of Chinese workers and built poor infrastruc­ture.”

Professor Patrick Bond of the Wits School of Governance is concerned about the bank’s due diligence practices. “The $200-million loan to expand the Durban port-petrochemi­cal complex via Transnet for sure will disrupt the communitie­s and the environmen­t, and will generate a major backlash protest,” he says.

Transnet said it would not comment on the loan agreement until it had been finalised.

Bond is also critical of the bank’s funding model, saying the loan terms mirror those of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

“We have never had access to the specific terms and conditions of Brics loans, but we know that 70% of the first batch are in US dollars, which makes repayment of these loans onerous,” he says.

There has been no indication that the NDB is offering a middle-income country like South Africa any concession­al credit, Bond says.

According to media reports in South Africa, most of the loans have gone to India and China, raising the question of whether they are being given preferenti­al access to funding.

But Nene says this is not the case. Despite the fact that “the roll-out of the projects has been uneven, this cannot be blamed on the bank itself as, if a country does not have a wellfuncti­oning system, it takes longer for projects to take off”.

He says South Africa lags behind because bankable projects have not yet been identified.

The NDB has set up a regional office, the Africa Regional Centre, to co-ordinate requests for infrastruc­ture funding, headed by former treasury deputy director general Monale Ratsoma. Nene believes more projects will be submitted now that the office is up and running.

In 2016, of the $1.5-billion in loans approved by the NDB for seven projects, Eskom received a R2.4-billion loan, which was later placed in abeyance. Last year, the bank approved a further $1.8-billion for six projects.

This year, the bank approved another six projects, at a total of $1.7-billion, pushing its loan book to $5.1-billion. These include India’s $350-million loan for a rural roads project and China’s $350-million to fund the Chongqing small cities sustainabl­e developmen­t programme.

At the NDB’s annual meeting in Shanghai, president KV Kamath told the media that, starting in the second half of this year, the bank will issue loans in local currencies to reduce the effects of exchange rate volatility and the borrowing costs of member countries.

Maasdorp says the bank will open its doors to non-Brics members, including African countries, as soon as it receives its credit rating.

“Fifty-five percent will remain owned by the five founding members and 45% will be split among the other countries,” he says.

Although the NDB’s website suggests it sees itself as an alternativ­e to the IMF and the World Bank, it appears its aspiration­s seem modest, and it is planning to work with existing developmen­t institutio­ns, both public and private. It intends forming partnershi­ps to cofinance projects with the Developmen­t Bank of South Africa, the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n and the African Developmen­t Bank, as well as commercial banks, says Maasdorp.

 ??  ?? Big boost: China has received a $350-million loan from the Brics bloc’s New Developmen­t Bank to build a shopping mall in Chongqing as part of its small cities sustainabl­e developmen­t programme. Photo: Reuters
Big boost: China has received a $350-million loan from the Brics bloc’s New Developmen­t Bank to build a shopping mall in Chongqing as part of its small cities sustainabl­e developmen­t programme. Photo: Reuters

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