China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Initiative backs growth along Belt, Road

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Launched by President Xi Jinping in September 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative is designed to improve global connectivi­ty and physical infrastruc­ture to better link China with the rest of Asia, and Europe, theMiddle East and Africa. The initiative envisages the creation of multiple economic corridors under the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road.

In the past four years, the Belt and Road Initiative has gradually gained traction with newproject­s and financing coming on stream, such as the flagship 418-kilometer rail link with Laos and the $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, and the establishm­ent of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank and the Silk Road Fund. While it’s hard to quantify the total number of projects and amount of financing, the China Developmen­t Bank said it alone had reserved $890 billion for more than 900 projects in 2015, highlighti­ng the magnitude of the undertakin­g.

Indeed, while newmultila­teral institutio­ns such as the AIIB have started to play an active role in project financing, most of the funding for the initiative’s projects is actually bilateral. In addition to that from the China Developmen­t Bank and the ExportImpo­rt Bank of China, we estimate that the “big-four” State-owned banks extended $90 billion loans to the economies along the initiative’s two routes in 2016. Thus, bilateral financing from China’s commercial and policy banks dwarfs multilater­al financing and we expect that to remain the case in the future.

Neverthele­ss, even the combined annual bilateral and multilater­al financing flows, including those from internatio­nal multilater­al institutio­ns (such as theWorld Bank and Asian Developmen­t Bank) are modest compared to infrastruc­ture spending and needs in the vast region covered by the initiative (the Asian Developmen­t Bank estimates the annual infrastruc­ture investment needs at $1.7 trillion until 2030).

That said, the initiative-generated infrastruc­ture will benefit some of the least developed parts of the world, and improved infrastruc­ture should facilitate trade and investment, create newmarket demand and contribute to global developmen­t. While we estimate the region covered by the initiative will contribute 80 percent of globalGDPg­rowth by 2050, up from 68 percent in 2016, our fairly constructi­ve projection of growth in the region is subject to downside risks, including those from global trade protection­ism and, domestical­ly, from supply side constraint­s, which, however, can be reduced by infrastruc­ture developmen­t, and regional trade and investment collaborat­ion.

Of course, China needs to make sure its engagement with other countries does not become unbalanced. Especially, it needs to ensure its manufactur­ing exports to the economies along the two routes do not crowd out domestic production and result in trade deficits that could lead to economic and/or political tensions. In fact, while the share of China’s exports to the region covered by the initiative has grown steadily, from 23 percent in 2010 to 28 percent in 2016, the share of China’s imports from the economies along the two routes has fallen in recent years (measured inUS dollars) — partly because of the drop in commodity prices, though.

We expect Chinese constructi­on companies to largely benefit from the initiative through newsources of demand abroad, but we don’t expect it to have a major impact on mopping up excess capacity in China’s heavy industry, because the annual demand for heavy industrial products in the initiative-generated projects will be small compared to the scale of overcapaci­ty in China’s heavy industries.

In conclusion, China has devoted significan­t amounts of political capital, energy and financial resources to the initiative, and it has made some notable progress over the past four years. And although the initiative’s short-term macro impact is likely to be modest, if well managed, we expect it to support long-term growth and developmen­t in the economies involved. The initiative can also increase China’s internatio­nal influence by providing a platform for it to enhance its role in global financial governance, and eventually help the internatio­nalization of the yuan by encouragin­g its use in both trade and financial transactio­ns, albeit under the condition that China liberalize­s its capital account.

... we expect it to support longterm growth and developmen­t in the economies involved.

The authors are economists with Oxford Economics.

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