China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Initiative looks beyond infrastruc­ture

-

The Belt and Road Initiative is generating a symphony of developmen­t worldwide. The Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n held in Beijing in May, and attended by more than 1,500 representa­tives from 130 countries and regions, achieved 270 deliverabl­es.

The Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway in Kenya, which opened on May 31, is also a fruit of the Belt and Road Initiative, as China loaned nearly 90 percent of the constructi­on cost to Kenya and helped build the 480kilomet­er railway in four years.

Overshadow­ed by the lack of fairness, openness, inclusiven­ess and public goods over the past few years, global governance needs fresh engines and more inclusive developmen­tal mechanisms.

The initiative’s developmen­tal finance, for example, comes with both financial services and institutio­nal guidance to complement the market economy of some countries. High on the agenda of the initiative, infrastruc­ture is sought after by a slew of developing countries aspiring for industrial­ization. China’s success in lifting 700 million people out of poverty in about four decades is also a key inspiratio­n for those countries participat­ing in the initiative.

Setting rules is no doubt necessary, but China has another important lesson to offer: developmen­t does not have a fixed pattern. Uzbekistan and Indonesia would not have received considerab­le infrastruc­ture loans had it not been for China’s Stateowned banks. Their request for loans would have been rejected by other banks because internatio­nal financial “norms” say so.

China’s infrastruc­ture plans, such as building high- speed railways, have been criticized by some Western observers for their high constructi­on costs which could take years even decades to be recovered. Yet the ensuing tourism and real estate boom should prove it is money well spent.

In Kenya, China has not only helped build the country’s first standard gauge railway, but also embarked on the constructi­on of industrial parks along the way to integrate the Mombasa-Nairobi railway, the Port of Mombasa and the Mombasa Special Economic Zone. China’s rise is a result of a similar approach, and its Belt and Road projects have the potential to help other emerging economies find their own path of perpetual developmen­t.

In fact, the Belt and Road Initiative is aimed at smoothing China’s economic transition and structural reform as well as addressing global issues, such as poverty, income gap and social governance. Its pursuit of enhanced connectivi­ty should be able to close the wealth gap between coastal and landlocked economies and recalibrat­e West-oriented globalizat­ion.

Unlike what traditiona­l globalizat­ion theories suggest, the Belt and Road Initiative is largely westbound with a focus on China’s western provinces and landlocked economies in Central Asia. Apart from infrastruc­ture investment, economies along the two routes will have access to China’s production capacity and bricks-andmortar industries, regardless of their so-called ideologica­l difference­s.

... its Belt and Road projects have the potential to help other emerging economies find their own path of perpetual developmen­t.

The author is a professor of internatio­nal relations at Renmin University of China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States