China Daily Global Weekly

Debunking the ‘debt trap’ claptrap

Western media’s misguided narrative ignores facts about China’s BRI

- By LIU YING The author is with the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Some Western media outlets keep spreading rumors that countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) that need to repay loans to China are facing a “debt trap”.

The problem is that the media outlets highlight the debt burden of developing countries but never talk about the debt burden of developed economies. The United States government debt, for example, exceeds $33 trillion, with the government debt ratio exceeding 120 percent. The government debt ratios of economies such as Europe and Japan are also more than 100 percent.

Of late, the Western media have claimed that Sri Lanka’s economy collapsed due to China’s “debt trap”. But the fact is that Sri Lanka faced an economic breakdown because it could not pay its high US dollar debt as the US Federal Reserve and other central banks hiked the interest rate.

Take the Puttalam power station in Sri Lanka, for example. The power generated by this Chinesebui­lt power station meets more than one-third of Sri Lanka’s electricit­y demand, benefiting more than 20 million people.

The vast majority of Sri Lanka’s debts are Western debts. Loans from China account for only a small part of them, with most of them being preferenti­al loans with far lower interest rates than commercial loans. So, there is no such thing as a China-created “debt trap” in Sri Lanka.

To analyze Sri Lanka’s debt problem, we have to first understand the relationsh­ip between debt and interest rate hikes; and between debt and developmen­t, investment and consumptio­n. An important reason for Sri Lanka’s debt problem is the appreciati­on of the US dollar due to the Fed’s interest rate hikes, with high interest rates pushing up the foreign debt levels of various countries. In fact, as early as the 1980s, the Fed’s rapid increase in interest rates caused 27 Latin American countries to suffer a debt crisis.

The percentage of Chinese loans in Sri Lanka’s total loans is very low. A report released by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka in 2017 showed the country’s total foreign debt was $51.8 billion, of which Chinarelat­ed debt accounted for only 10.6 percent, with the interest rates for 61 percent of them being far lower than internatio­nal market interest rates.

The investment­s made through the BRI in other countries are aimed at improving infrastruc­ture including industrial parks, stimulatin­g economic growth.

The Mombasa-Nairobi Railway, for instance, is not only boosting Kenya’s GDP by 2 percentage points but also helping create 50,000 jobs in Kenya each year. In fact, the extension of the Mombasa-Nairobi Railway can also help solve the problems of neighborin­g countries going to sea, improve East Africa’s connectivi­ty, and enhance Africa’s integratio­n and modernizat­ion.

As a developing country, China has summed up its developmen­t experience and is determined that if it wants to get rich, it must first build roads, and raise funds, which is a very difficult task.

According to Asian Developmen­t Bank data in 2017, the annual infrastruc­ture funding gap in Asia was $459 billion per year. The Silk Road Fund, which was establishe­d in 2014, has a total capital of $40 billion and 100 billion yuan.

China also initiated the creation of the $100 billion Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank with 109 active member states. Infrastruc­ture and interconne­ctivity are the foundation of a country’s economic developmen­t. Without infrastruc­ture, there will be no flow of people, money, and materials. Without the flow of these things, nothing can be built. And to build, you need funds.

However, developing countries, due to their weak economic foundation­s and low credit ratings, find it difficult to get low-interest loans. According to World Bank data, of the total $696 billion foreign debt of 49 African countries, loans from non-Chinese multilater­al financial institutio­ns and private financial institutio­ns account for three-fourths of the total, while the interest rate on loans taken from Western private institutio­ns is more than twice that on Chinese loans.

In fact, the so-called debt trap theory has long been disproved.

By 2030, the joint constructi­on of the BRI will generate $1.6 trillion in global benefits every year. It will help 7.6 million people around the world emerge from poverty and 32 million people escape moderate poverty.

At the same time, China has taken measures to help developing countries address their debt problems, including but not limited to participat­ing in the G20 debt reduction plan. The so-called debt trap is pure nonsense.

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