UAE eyeing global player role as it teams up in deals
Emirates wants to expand cooperation with Beijing and be low-risk gateway to Middle East
The United Arab Emirates, a key node for China’s growing economic relations in the Middle East, is using its Chinese connection to co-invest in Africa and the South Pacific, while considering more transactions in the yuan, an Emirati official says.
The ventures follow a decade of the UAE working with China on ports, export zones and other infrastructure, Hong Kong-based consul general Shaikh Saoud Ali al-Mualla said.
“Both countries are expanding their cooperation through joint investments in the Pacific islands and on the African continent,” Mualla told the Post.
China has invested in Africa for nearly a quarter of a century, lured by its natural resources and a chance to form closer relations with a region seen as relatively overlooked by the United States.
Much of Africa and the Middle East have hooked into China’s Belt and Road Initiative – Beijing’s trade initiative to link economies into a China-centred network.
The UAE, a wealthy economic hub in the Gulf region, is the fourth largest global investor in Africa, according to investments database fDi Markets. It says that investment reached about US$60 billion over the past decade, including ports and other infrastructure.
“Of all the [belt and road] nations situated within the Gulf, the United Arab Emirates is strategically positioned to consolidate its role as the primary facilitator of trade and investment in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia region,” Mualla said.
The UAE has already invested US$10 billion in a China-led fund for Africa.
In the South Pacific, China’s trade, commerce and diplomacy have grown in recent years, while the UAE has allocated at least US$50 million to projects in the region where it can develop low-carbon technologies and grow foreign relations.
More than 4,000 Chinese companies already operate in the UAE, targeting the 100 million-population in the Gulf region, Mualla added.
The Chinese-state-owned Cosco Shipping, the largest container operator in the world, uses Khalifa Port in the UAE capital of Abu Dhabi as its centre for Middle East operations, Mualla said.
Chinese investors see their UAE bases as a “springboard” to build inroads in other countries, Naubahar Sharif, head of the public policy division at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, said.
“This is in line with the UAE’s ability to be a more global player, sort of like Hong Kong,” he said.
Mualla said use of the yuan would “definitely” increase in the UAE and countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative over “the coming years”.
A bigger role for the yuan would track with China’s efforts for more countries to conduct trade in its currency to reduce dependence on the US dollar.
China renewed a currency swap deal with the UAE last month to expand financial and economic relations.
More yuan traffic would play into the UAE’s “global aspirations”, Sharif said.
He said currency swaps or other “structured” yuan terms could “mitigate currency risks given high trade volumes”.
But the consul general said that “the extent to which the UAE may embrace the use of yuan remains uncertain”.
China and the UAE were also eager on “enhancing collaboration” between the Shanghai Stock Exchange and UAE-based international financial centres, Mualla said. For China, the UAE ranks eighth of 80 countries as key locations for investment.