China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Initiative has made significan­t headway

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Since the launch of Belt and Road Initiative (the Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st CenturyMar­itime Silk Road), China has reached cooperatio­n agreements with more than 30 countries along the Belt and Road.

Infrastruc­ture is a key priority of the Belt and Road Initiative to promote transport connectivi­ty between regions. Work on many cross-border projects, including railway networks, highways and ports, has already started, while other projects are in the pipeline. The Belt and Road projects could potentiall­y channel China’s savings, production capacity and constructi­on expertise to other countries to help reduce their infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s and promote regional developmen­t.

The initiative has boosted trade and investment growth. Trade between China and countries along the Belt and Road exceeded $1 trillion in 2015, a quarter of China’s total trade value. The initiative also accelerate­d China’s shift from the world’s biggest goods exporter to a major capital exporter. China’s outbound direct investment to economies along the Belt and Road grew 23.8 percent year-on-year in 2015 and nearly 60 percent in the first half of 2016.

China has also made efforts to reduce trade barriers, by developing more than 50 overseas economic and trade cooperatio­n zones with countries along the Belt and Road and expanded its free trade zones’ trial to seven more provinces, in order to strengthen industrial cooperatio­n and enhance liberaliza­tion with other countries.

The implementa­tion of the Belt and Road Initiative has also facilitate­d the renminbi’s internatio­nalization and financial cooperatio­n. China has expanded its bilateral local-currency swap program to 21 countries along the Belt and Road, granted renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutio­nal Investor quotas to seven countries and set up renminbi settlement banks in eight countries along the Belt and Road.

Key multilater­al organizati­ons have begun operations and new financing mechanisms are being set up. The Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, BRICSNew Developmen­t Bank and the Silk Road Fund, together with China’s policy banks, have taken the lead and started participat­ing in crossborde­r investment projects.

But despite the progress made in the past three years, the Belt and Road Initiative face risks and challenges at both the country and corporate levels, with strategy alignment and cost-sharing between participat­ing countries

being the main challenges. Some projects in foreign countries have been suspended or deferred highlighti­ng the obstacles China faces in implementi­ng the initiative. To remove these obstacles, China needs to align its strategy with those of other Belt and Road countries, and effectivel­y address these countries’ doubts and concerns.

We think proper strategy alignment and dispute settlement procedures will reduce the probabilit­y of project suspension even in case government­s change. China needs to ensure mutual benefits from the initiative, as it is a commercial­ly oriented project, not a foreign aid program. And it requires participat­ing countries to make long-term commitment­s and invest to gain mutual benefits and joint developmen­t.

To be successful, China must make other countries fully aware of the economic logic and mutual benefits of the initiative, and demonstrat­e through existing projects that it will create jobs, improve local areas’ connectivi­ty with the rest of the world, and enhance their welfare.

Chinese companies investing in Belt and Road projects are also facing risks, including general debt risks, foreign currency risks, local policy risks and geopolitic­al risks, because of the lack of experience and knowledge in operating and investing in other countries. To mitigate these risks, they need to conduct profession­al project assessment­s and devise risk management systems before venturing into those countries, while effectivel­y using credit insurance and overseas investment service platforms to improve the management of their foreign projects.

Furthermor­e, the government should encourage participat­ion from multilater­al institutio­ns and continue to promote the renminbi’s internatio­nalization to help private companies better control their risks. Dealing with these challenges should provide useful lessons for the developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative. The author is an economist at Standard Chartered China.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY
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