Cape Times

Angola draws fresh interest from Chinese businesses

- | Bloomberg

ANGOLA is attracting renewed interest from Chinese business owners since it lifted curbs on money transfers, following an exodus of tens of thousands of Chinese amid an economic crisis.

Africa’s second-largest oil producer introduced foreign-exchange policies that have made it easy to transfer money legally, Xu Ning, chairperso­n of the Angola-China Industrial and Commerce Associatio­n, said in an interview in the capital, Luanda. That’s drawing a “new group” of companies from China to Angola, mainly in the industrial sector, he said.

“The new government is doing things that make it safe to invest in Angola,” Xu said. “We’re much better off than before.”

Angola has had the highest number of Chinese workers of any country in sub-Saharan Africa for almost a decade, reaching a peak of 50 526 in 2013, data from Johns Hopkins University’s China-Africa Research Initiative show. These figures don’t include traders, shopkeeper­s and independen­t business owners.

More than 100 000 Chinese workers, traders and businesspe­ople left the country after the 2014 oil-price crash triggered an economic crisis and froze most constructi­on projects, according to Xu. Relying on oil for more than 90 percent of exports, Angola kept a tight grip on its currency, even as dollars ran dry, leaving hundreds of companies struggling to pay overseas suppliers.

Under President Joao Lourenco, who assumed office two years ago, the central bank eased restrictio­ns on money transfers and it has become more appealing for businesses to get dollars from official channels, according to Xu.

Today, the official exchange rate for the kwanza is 369 per dollar, compared to a black-market rate of 530 per dollar, according to data.

That compares to an official rate of about 166 kwanza per dollar and a street rate that was twice as high in September 2017.

Angola’s public debt to China currently stands at $22.8 billion (R336bn).

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