China Daily

BRI inspires concerted efforts for global developmen­t

Moreover, the Belt and Road Initiative does not present itself as the only model for realizing modernizat­ion and globalizat­ion to be copied by the current and potential partners.

- Francisco José Leandro The author is an associate professor at the University of Macau (China). The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those China Daily.

The Belt and Road, after 10 years of operation, has acquired the status of the ancient Silk Road, raised its brand status, and become one of the biggest protagonis­ts and practition­ers of economic globalizat­ion.

The evolution of this Chinese initiative has taught the internatio­nal community a number of lessons. Among them, two are inspiring as well as revealing. First, the Belt and Road Initiative has prompted a number of global power contenders to take parallel steps to build on similar ideas while raising new concerns in order to promote high-quality developmen­t, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and social progress. And second, the initiative has not only been developing and extending its reach; it has also pioneered a leading cooperatio­n mechanism, making modernizat­ion a new driver of globalizat­ion.

The Belt and Road Initiative has prompted other economies to launch similar initiative­s to advance economic developmen­t both regionally and globally. For instance, India and Japan announced the “Asia-Africa Growth Corridor” in 2016, the United States, Australia, Japan, the United Kingdom and the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t advanced the “Blue Dot Network” in 2019, the G7 member states launched the “Build Back Better World” initiative in 2021 and the Partnershi­p for Global Infrastruc­ture and Investment in 2022 to mobilize $600 billion for global infrastruc­ture investment­s by 2027, and the European Union proposed the “Global Gateway” in 2021 to boost smart, clean and secure links in digital, energy and transport sectors and strengthen education, healthcare and research systems across the world.

These initiative­s are in different stages of developmen­t and have different levels of global engagement, in some cases with very limited success, but they all share a common thread: promoting values on a global scale and pushing for globalizat­ion. As the European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said, the Global Gateway will facilitate “smart investment­s in quality infrastruc­ture, respecting the highest social and environmen­tal standards, in line with the EU’s values and standards. The Global Gateway strategy is a template for how Europe can build more resilient connection­s with the world.”

The latest example of such an initiative is the “India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor”, which was launched by France, Germany, India, Italy, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, the United States and the European Commission at the G20 Summit in New Delhi last year to link Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

More important, the Belt and Road Initiative is challengin­g the monopoly of the West in the postwar world order, as it represents a framework of collaborat­ive practices so as to present quasi-global solutions to common global problems. And at the opening ceremony of the third Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, China’s top leader emphasized that Belt and Road cooperatio­n has developed from physical connectivi­ty to institutio­nal connectivi­ty.

China has laid down the important guiding principles for high-quality Belt and Road cooperatio­n, which include the principle of “planning together, building together, and benefiting together”, the philosophy of open, green and clean cooperatio­n, and the pursuit of “highstanda­rd, people-centered and sustainabl­e cooperatio­n”. One of the strongest arguments in favor of the initiative, apart from its size and economic leverage, is its unequivoca­l contributi­on to global economic growth, which in turn will help realize the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

All these initiative­s are aimed at connecting markets and production centers around the world to ensure the unimpeded flow of goods as well as to raise social capital. Similarly, all the initiative­s are committed to protecting the environmen­t, improving governance and pursuing sustainabl­e growth. But what differenti­ates the Belt and Road Initiative from non-Chinese driven global initiative­s is the fact that the former has been adapting to new challenges by, for example, promoting digitaliza­tion, raising product and service quality, transferri­ng technologi­es, enhancing industrial efficiency, better protecting the environmen­t, safeguardi­ng energy security, and improving governance while also promoting supplement­ary initiative­s such as the Global Developmen­t Initiative, the Global Security Initiative and the Global Civilizati­on Initiative.

Moreover, the Belt and Road Initiative does not present itself as the only model for realizing modernizat­ion and globalizat­ion to be copied by the current and potential partners. It rather presents a conglomera­te of intertwine­d viewpoints, seeking joint efforts, promoting peopleto-people exchanges, investing in developmen­t projects, and making more efforts to create a fairer and equitable global economic order by ending the US dollar’s hegemony in global trade.

The Belt and Road is a framework initiative, which in conjunctio­n with a number of others and with an innovative global vision seeks market access with consent and promotes globalizat­ion as an alternativ­e to the United States-led monopolize­d economic and trade order. The Belt and Road Initiative has not only prompted other economies to launch similar trade and developmen­t initiative­s, but also captured the imaginatio­n of the majority of the countries, as it advances a framework for cooperatio­n rather than adopting a “buy or leave” attitude.

The Belt and Road is a leading global initiative and a framework for global cooperatio­n, encouragin­g other global powers to launch similar initiative­s, and promote modernizat­ion and global economic developmen­t based on a shared vision.

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