The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia latest US ally to join China-backed infrastruc­ture bank

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The decision comes after extensive discussion­s between the government, China and other key partners around the world.

SYDNEY: Australia said yesterday it will join the new Beijing-led Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank as a founding member, contributi­ng A$930 million (US$719 million) in paidin capital over five years.

Australia is the latest US ally to sign up to the bank, which has been shunned by Washington and Tokyo, the world’s largest and third-largest economies respective­ly.

The AIIB has 57 prospectiv­e members, and will have a paid-in capital of US$20 billion and total authorised capital of US$100 billion, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Treasurer Joe Hockey said in a joint statement.

“The decision comes after extensive discussion­s between the government, China and other key partners around the world,” the ministers said.

“There is an estimated infrastruc­ture financing gap of around US$8 trillion in the Asian region over the current decade. The AIIB will be part of the solution to closing this gap.”

Hockey will seal the agreement in Beijing on Monday.

The bank, expected to be operationa­l later this year and based in the Chinese capital, has been viewed by some as a rival to the World Bank and the

Joe Hockey, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Treasurer

Asian Developmen­t Bank, two institutio­ns under strong US influence.

Its success has caught the US off guard, after it led a high-profile attempt to dissuade allies from taking part, and now finds itself increasing­ly isolated.

There have been concerns over transparen­cy of the lender, which will fund infrastruc­ture in Asia, as well as worries that Beijing will use it to push its own geopolitic­al and economic interests as a rising power.

But Hockey said that following ‘intense negotiatio­ns’ with China and other prospectiv­e founding members, Australia was satisfied with how the bank would be governed.

“We are absolutely satisfied that the governance arrangemen­ts now in place will ensure that there is appropriat­e transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the bank,” the treasurer told broadcaste­r Sky News.

“I have spoken with the Secretary of the US Treasury Jack Lew about it in the last 48 hours and we’ve also spoken with the Japanese government to address their concerns.

“They (the Americans) understood exactly where we were coming from.

It is a significan­t opportunit­y for Australia.” The Australian government expects the bank, through its support of Asian infrastruc­ture projects, to help boost the nation’s exports – including minerals, agricultur­e and services – to the region.

Australia and China signed a landmark trade deal last Wednesday after a decade of talks that Prime Minister Tony Abbott said would give the two nations unpreceden­ted access to each other’s markets. — AFP

 ??  ?? The bank, expected to be operationa­l later this year and based in the Chinese capital, has been viewed by some as a rival to the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank, two institutio­ns under strong US influence. — Reuters photo
The bank, expected to be operationa­l later this year and based in the Chinese capital, has been viewed by some as a rival to the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank, two institutio­ns under strong US influence. — Reuters photo

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