Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

China overloadin­g...

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The criticism of Beijing - targeted by President Donald Trump in a trade war that has sent ripples through economies around the world - comes as Washington seeks to ramp up developmen­t finance in the face of China’s global ambitions.

Unveiled in 2013, President Xi Jinping’s ‘Belt and Road’ initiative aims to build an infrastruc­ture network connecting China by land and sea to Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa.

China has pledged US $ 126 billion for the plan, which has been praised by its supporters as a source of vital financing for infrastruc­ture-starved partners in the developing world.

But in an interview with Reuters in Johannesbu­rg, OPIC CEO Ray Washburne warned that the Chinese strategy created a debt trap for many poor nations.

“Just look at any project in these countries and they’re overbuildi­ng the size,” he said.

“We try to have countries realise that they’re indebting themselves to the Chinese.”

Washburne is not the first to warn of growing debt linked to Chinese infrastruc­ture projects.

Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde in April cautioned China’s Belt and Road partners against considerin­g the financing as “a free lunch”.

Sri Lanka formally handed over commercial activities in its main southern port in the town of Hambantota to a Chinese company in December as part of a plan to convert US $ 6 billion of loans that Sri Lanka owes China into equity.

The US officials have warned that a strategic port in the tiny Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti could be next, a prospect the government there has denied.

Washburne also voiced concern over a US $ 360 million expansion of the airport in Zambia’s capital Lusaka currently being carried out with financing from the Exim Bank of China.

“The local economy isn’t benefiting from that. It’s a much too large airport. They’ll have too much debt on it. At some point, someone’s got to pay. Pay or the Chinese take control,” he said.

Lawmakers in the United States are advancing a new law - the BUILD Act - through Congress that Washburne says should bolster private US investment in developing nations by doubling OPIC’S access to US Treasury credit to US $ 60 billion.

About a quarter of the active portfolio of OPIC, a government agency that helps the US businesses invest in emerging markets, is currently focused on Africa and it typically invests around US $ 1 billion annually on the continent.

“With the right quality projects, it could double here,” Washburne said, adding that many investment­s would focus on the kinds of infrastruc­ture projects Chinese firms are currently dominating.

“The Chinese are in with ports and railroads and highways, things that we need to be in as a competitor.”

OPIC this month launched an Africa-focused initiative that will earmark more than US $ 1 billion over the next three years for projects supporting transporta­tion, informatio­n and communicat­ions technology and value chains.

“Instead of giving them a fish, we want to teach them how to fish,” Washburne said.

“They’ll have to stand on their own two feet. So we’re not in making loans or doing projects that don’t make economic sense.”

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