National Post

Chinese bank bests U.S.

The big blow came in mid-March when the United Kingdom decided to join

- John Browne Financial Post John Browne, Senior Economic Consultant to Euro Pacific Capital.

Over the past few decades while the economic power of the Chinese has grown exponentia­lly, many observers have been surprised by the relative willingnes­s of China to operate within the financial and economic framework establishe­d by the dominant Western order. But it should now be blatantly clear that Beijing prefers to act slowly, deliberate­ly and quietly to advance its agenda. This is the case with the establishm­ent of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB), a Chinese-led lending institutio­n which could emerge as an internatio­nal rival to the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. Such an institutio­n could support Beijing’s political interests by controllin­g the flow of infrastruc­ture financing that is vital for developing economies. As we all know, money can often buy loyalty.

Currently the regional infrastruc­ture lending in Asia is led by the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB), modelled after the U.S.-dominated World Bank. Founded in the 1960s and headquarte­red in the Philippine­s, the ADB is headed by a Japanese appointee who enjoys the support of a 25% U.S./Japanese block vote, dwarfing China’s 6%. But according to 2013 figures from the World Bank, and excluding the European Union’s GDP of $17.5 trillion, China’s GDP, at $9.2 trillion, now is second only to that of the U.S. with $16.8 trillion. It should have been clear that China would not accept such relegation indefinite­ly.

In October of last year China and India led 19 other Asian and Middle Eastern nations in the formation of the AIIB, which was initially capitalize­d with more than $50 billion. The United States, angry at what it perceived as a clear threat to its domination, supported by European and Japanese interests, leaned heavily on its allies not to join. Notably absent from the AIIB launch celebratio­ns were the important Asian nations of Australia, Japan and South Korea, all very close allies of the U.S. However, once China decided to yield veto power, some Western interests appear to have reconsider­ed their opposition.

The big blow came in mid-March when the United Kingdom (despite its “special relationsh­ip” with the United States) decided to join. This in turn encouraged other powerful EU nations, including Germany, France and Italy, to jump in as well. On March 26th, even South Korea joined, bringing the total AIIB membership to 37 nations, including nine non-regional countries. This clear move to support China’s campaign for greater regional power left the United States notably isolated. In response to the decision from London to lend its support, a U.S. government official told the Financial Times, “We are wary about a trend toward constant accommodat­ion of China, which is not the best way to engage a rising power.”

The strength of support for the AIIB could be another step towards the “de-dollarizat­ion” that many expect to be the endgame of Chinese economic policy. The loss of the U.S. dollar’s coveted position as the internatio­nal reserve currency would be a direct threat to America’s ability effectivel­y to set world interest rates and to create seemingly limitless fiat dollars without the need to finance them in free markets. The AIIB represents one more indication that the “old” order of dollar hegemony may be nearing an end.

The ADB argues that there is an $8-trillion infrastruc­ture gap in Asia and that investment there will yield true economic growth and wealth creation. However, the Japanese fear that China will try to tie and even annex Asian countries via a network of strategic pipelines, railways and roads. In all likelihood, China may use the newly establishe­d AIIB to do just that.

Under President Obama, America is appearing weak on many fronts, including defence and monetary affairs. Already a combinatio­n of Obama’s apparently inept foreign policy has led Chancellor Merkel of Germany to take a different posture over the Ukraine, exposing a potentiall­y damaging split in the vitally important and longstandi­ng NATO alliance. By leaning on its allies publicly, but ultimately ineffectiv­ely, to resist China’s AIIB overtures, Obama has exposed another level of increasing diplomatic and monetary weakness.

Clearly, the Obama Administra­tion was angered by the U.K.’s reversal. Patrick Ventrell, a spokesman for the National Security Council, told CNN-Money that the White House had “concerns” over whether the AIIB will meet “high standards, particular­ly related to governance, and environmen­tal and social safeguards.” He added, “This is the U.K.’s sovereign decision. We hope and expect that the U.K. will use its voice to push for adoption of high standards.”

It appears that de-dollarizat­ion is progressin­g slowly but surely, with the formation of the AIIB being just a single but important and highly visible step in that process.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada