Jamaica Gleaner

China steps into leadership vacuum in the Americas

- THE VIEW FROM EUROPE David Jessop

AFEW days ago, China struck a remarkable deal. It agreed with the state of California to work on projects that will help lower United States greenhouse gas emissions.

In a move that symbolical­ly set aside President’s Trump’s ill-considered decision to reject the global consensus on climate change, they agreed to establish a joint Chinese-California­n working group.

This will explore how low carbon technologi­es can be applied to urban developmen­t and transport and will create partnershi­ps between California­n companies, universiti­es and their counterpar­ts in China’s provinces.

It was a demonstrat­ion of Beijing’s willingnes­s to think differentl­y about all future relationsh­ips, builds on US states’ ability to act independen­tly, and was supportive of a possible future Democratic contender for the presidency, Governor of California Jerry Brown, in his determinat­ion to move his green policies forward.

It also signalled China’s flexibilit­y and willingnes­s to develop alternativ­e strategies when a positive long-term outcome is likely. Although unrelated, it occurred shortly after Chinese officials had been indicating how Beijing’s thinking on Latin America and the Caribbean is evolving.

In comments to the media, Zhu Qingqiao, the director general of the Department for Latin American and Caribbean Affairs in China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said China’s objective in the Americas was to move its relationsh­ip to a higher level through closer cooperatio­n on policy, economics, trade, culture, internatio­nal affairs, accompanie­d by developmen­t support.

To this end, he said, China’s President, Xi Jinping, had issued instructio­ns to build comprehens­ive but mutually beneficial multilater­al ties with the region.

GLOBALISAT­ION BOOST

To achieve this, Mr Zhu said China’s focus is on creating a new joint developmen­t model based on logistics, energy, and informatic­s. He also highlighte­d China’s Silk Road initiative and the opportunit­y for every nation in the Americas to benefit from its US$600 billion global infrastruc­ture programme, which aims to spur globalisat­ion through road, rail and maritime linkages.

He encouraged the region to make use of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank – China’s alternativ­e to the World Bank – and highlighte­d China’s commitment to the China-Community of Latin American and Caribbean States forum and Beijing’s willingnes­s to spend US$35 billion in support of developmen­t projects in the Americas.

In an indication of China’s now significan­t economic role in Latin America and the Caribbean – second only to the US – Mr Zhu said that his country’s total investment in the Americas in 2016 had reached US$150 billion, and bilateral trade last year stood at US$210 billion.

In short, what China is now advancing is more than a developmen­t strategy for the Americas. It is promoting an approach that eventually leads to a greater policy coincidenc­e on global and hemispheri­c issues, and by extension, to the eventual rebalancin­g or distancing of the role and influence that the US and Europe have exercised previously in the hemisphere. Last month, President Xi placed his thinking in a global context by emphasisin­g his country’s role in defending globalisat­ion and encouragin­g future developmen­t in a manner that is more equitable.

Speaking to a high-level internatio­nal audience attending the opening of the country’s ‘Belt and Road Forum’, he said: “We should build an open platform of cooperatio­n and uphold and grow an open world economy. We should jointly create an environmen­t that will facilitate opening up and developmen­t, establish a fair, equitable and transparen­t system of internatio­nal trade and investment rules and boost the orderly flow of production factors, efficient resources allocation and full market integratio­n.”

INTERESTIN­G TIME

China’s recent statements on its global policy and approach towards the Americas come at a time when the privately expressed opinions of a number of Caribbean political figures about President Trump’s ‘America first’ policy are threatenin­g to break out into the open.

On June 4, in a first public indication of the region’s unease, CARICOM formally responded to Trump’s decision that he would withdraw from the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

Speaking for the Caribbean community, the current CARICOM chairman, President of Guyana David Granger, said its members were “deeply dismayed and disappoint­ed by the decision of the United States to withdraw” while noting that it was “more than just another internatio­nal agreement on another complex internatio­nal issue”. The issue for the Caribbean was, he stated, “an existentia­l threat” requiring global solutions.

In unusually strong language, the CARICOM statement described the US decision as an “abdication of that responsibi­lity” and as having sent a negative signal to those most vulnerable to the effects of climate change, while noting that CARICOM was encouraged that the overwhelmi­ng majority of nations remains firmly committed to the Paris Agreement.

By default, Washington is ceding to China the high ground it previously held in the Caribbean and Latin America.

WELCOME DREAM

President Xi’s desire to see economic globalisat­ion deliver greater global equity is of course welcome, as is his willingnes­s to put forward an alternativ­e view to that of the present incumbent in the White House.

However, for China’s approach to truly benefit the Caribbean, what will be required is a relationsh­ip that goes beyond investment and developmen­t financing, and identifies how the region might obtain improved access to the Chinese market for its goods and services.

It is a point emphasised recently by President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya who, in a Financial Times interview, called on China to rebalance its

skewed trade relationsh­ip with Africa, arguing that Beijing must do more to tackle a widening trade deficit. Referring to concerns in parts of Africa, that China was recreating colonial trading patterns, Mr Kenyatta expressed the hope that Beijing was “beginning to appreciate that if their win-win strategy is going to work, it must mean that, just as Africa opens up to China, China must also open up to Africa”.

China’s rise is of profound significan­ce and is more than just an economic phenomenon. It demonstrat­es that the world’s centres of gravity are relocating.

It is happening as US policy towards Latin America and the Caribbean has become incoherent; as swingeing budget cuts are being proposed; the US is to withdraw from the Paris climate change agreement; its Cuba policy in part may be reversed; and the White House’s global perspectiv­e is impossible to discern.

By default, Washington is ceding to China the high ground it previously held in the Caribbean and Latin America.

 ?? AP ?? California Governor Jerry Brown (right) is shown an exhibition at an internatio­nal clean energy conference in Beijing, China on Wednesday, June 7. With President Donald Trump pulling the US out of the Paris climate accord, China and California signed...
AP California Governor Jerry Brown (right) is shown an exhibition at an internatio­nal clean energy conference in Beijing, China on Wednesday, June 7. With President Donald Trump pulling the US out of the Paris climate accord, China and California signed...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? China’s Xi Jinping
China’s Xi Jinping

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica