Manila Bulletin

38 countries, ASEAN sign up for AIIB

Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank

- By KELLY OLSEN

BEIJING ( AFP) – China scored a diplomatic coup by enticing almost 50 countries including key US allies to join its new developmen­t bank, but analysts say authoritar­ian Beijing now faces a daunting task managing a multilater­al institutio­n for the first time, with members ranging from the Netherland­s to Nepal.

By Tuesday's deadline to seek founding membership of the $50 billion Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB) a total of 48 countries and Taiwan had applied, the finance ministry and government­s said.

They include four of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, 16 out of 34 members of the Organizati­on for Economic CoOperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) and all 10 members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Conspicuou­s by their absence are the United States and Japan.

China already has leading roles in the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on that links it with Russia and Central Asian countries, and the BRICS group of emerging economies -- which also comprises Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa.

But the AIIB ''is on a whole different level'', said Christophe­r Balding, of Peking University's HSBC Business School.

''This is a lot more money, this is countries that have a lot more influence and expect to be taken a lot more seriously.''

The signatorie­s include countries closely tied to China such as Kazakhstan and Myanmar, but also some of Washington's biggest allies -- Germany, Britain, France, Italy and Australia.

With democratic and market systems they will have strong views on issues such as the environmen­t, human rights, corruption and efficient lending.

China has basked in the enthusiast­ic acceptance­s of its invitation­s despite US opposition, but the victory could end up a case of ''be careful of what you wish for'', Balding added.

''The more countries like this that you bring on board the tougher it's going to be for you to control and the more input those people are very reasonably going to expect to have,'' he told AFP.

Reports said a key part of Beijing's appeal was a willingnes­s to give up veto power over the bank's decisions -- which it said it was not seeking.

ANZ economists said the AIIB could offer ''a new approach for Asia's infrastruc­ture financing'', with ''more transparen­t and well-developed practice and policies from advanced economies''.

But there are enduring concerns over the openness of a bank helmed by China -- which is led by an authoritar­ian Communist Party embroiled in endemic corruption -- and whether Beijing will want to use it to push its own geopolitic­al and economic interests as a rising great power.

Asia will need vast transport, power and telecommun­ications networks in coming decades, costing far more than existing multilater­al lenders such as the US-led World Bank and the Japan-led Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) are considered able to deliver.

An ADB study once estimated infrastruc­ture spending demand at $8 trillion between 2010 and 2020.

Under President Xi Jinping China, the world's second-largest economy, is pushing to build on the ancient Silk Road trade routes on land and sea, a '' One Belt, One Road'' initiative expected to be part-funded by the AIIB.

'' Beijing is clearly pursuing economic statecraft in a big way, centring its foreign policy on the strategy of what I've called 'talk softer and carry a large purse','' said Damien Ma, a fellow at The Paulson Institute in Washington.

The approach is built around a ''grandiose vision of recreating the old Silk Road trading routes to further integrate Eurasia economical­ly'', he said in an email.

'' All the newly formed entities, AIIB, Silk Road Fund, BRICS Bank etc, should be viewed as vehicles that will support this ambitious endeavor in one form or another.''

China insists it has no ulterior or selfish motives.

''The AIIB is a mutually beneficial initiative and is a beneficial complement to the existing internatio­nal economic order,'' vice finance minister Shi Yaobin said in a statement, promising it will be built ''in an open, transparen­t and highly-efficient manner.''

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines