China Daily Global Weekly

Bonds forged from trust, equality

Africa sees China as a better economic partner than Western nations, for good reasons

- By TOM FOWDY The author is a British political and internatio­nal relations analyst. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

China’s economic

What is the relationsh­ip between China and Africa all about? There are a lot of misconcept­ions about this in American and European media, which enjoy portraying it in sinister ways as a onesided relationsh­ip through talk of so-called “debt traps”.

While Africa is a large and diverse continent with many peoples and cultures, the relationsh­ip between China and African nations is marked by a long-establishe­d sense of solidarity and shared experience­s.

Addressing the 8th Ministeria­l Conference of the Forum on ChinaAfric­a Cooperatio­n in Dakar, Senegal, on Nov 29, Chinese leader Xi Jinping said that “China will never forget African countries “profound friendship”. During the meeting, Xi pledged the donation of 1 billion additional vaccines to Africa in wake of the Omicron variant, provide new developmen­t assistance, and carry out several projects on poverty alleviatio­n and agricultur­e.

China and Africa are part of what is known as “The Global South” — a generic term which refers to countries that are of a lower income and have lacked the privileges of the “Global North”, which primarily refers to developed

American and European nations.

Global South nations are countries that, in their experience, have often been subject to colonialis­m, oppression or domination by wealthier nations, and it is only in the last century that many have gained their formal independen­ce. Existing in a far less secure environmen­t, Global South countries, as a result, prioritize attaining economic developmen­t and escaping from poverty, as well as protecting national sovereignt­y.

It was in the 1950s and 60s, from the common historical experience­s, that the foundation­s of the broader China-Africa relationsh­ip were laid, particular­ly through incentives such as the non-aligned movement which sought to avoid the power blocs of the Cold War and forge friendship on the premise of post-colonial solidarity. As Xi noted in his address, “Over the past 65 years, China and Africa have forged unbreakabl­e fraternity in the struggle against imperialis­m and colonialis­m”.

The wider relationsh­ip was built on shared principles that the developed American and European economies had not been prepared to recognize, including aspects such as seeing each other as equals, mutual respect for national sovereignt­y and non-interferen­ce in internal affairs.

While the developed American and European economies have sought to force their ideologica­l vision on Africa, economical­ly exploit the continent, condition aid and developmen­t upon political changes — as we are seeing with the United States and Ethiopia right now — and undermine their sovereignt­y, African countries have found China as a more establishe­d and trustworth­y partner of mutual understand­ing, allowing both sides to transcend any difference­s in political systems or culture and embrace ironclad “South-South solidarity”.

China understand­s what it means to be colonized, targeted by the developed American and European economies and be treated as an inferior, hence it offers African countries the diplomatic equality they do not receive otherwise.

Likewise, China’s economic and developmen­t relationsh­ip with Africa is not exploitati­ve or a so-called “debt trap” — instead, it marks a situation wherein China is able to help Africa through the experience of having rapidly escaped poverty itself with a highly useful developmen­t model. On Nov 29, China again waived payments of non-interest loans by poorest African economies. China does not attach political strings or conditions on its lending, aid or trade with African countries.

In the 1980s, developed American and European financial institutio­ns forced drastic neoliberal changes on Africa which engineered severe economic decline and depletion of living standards. Since that time, China has engineered the way out for Africa to continue to grow again, allowing bilateral trade to boom, developing large export markets for African commoditie­s, establishi­ng local manufactur­ing and building game-changing infrastruc­ture. This is what has made China a preferenti­al partner to African countries than Americans and some Europeans, who treat the continent as a subordinat­e party to be “helped” or tailored to their vision.

As a result, while countries such as the United States suddenly turn their attention back to Africa and decide it is “important” after years of neglect, amid a goal to compete with China, nations on the continent will remember from the historical legacies and shared sentiments as to who their most trusty and hardy partner continues to be. This is a relationsh­ip conceived not on inequality, on a zero-sum game or opportunis­m, but on a shared experience. Thus, China-Africa ties will continue to advance and prosper.

and developmen­t

relationsh­ip

with Africa is not

exploitati­ve or a

so-called “debt

trap”.

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