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O E Watch Mobile Edition Is China Practicing “Debt-Trap Diplomacy” in Africa?
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  • +OE Watch Mobile Edition
  • OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 06, Jun 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • +OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 05, May 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • -OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 04, Apr 2018 (Mobile Edition)
    • 13 Million Users of Domestic Messaging Apps in Iran
    • A Chinese Perspective on Pakistan-Russian Cooperation in Afghanistan
    • A Militarized Silicon Valley in Russia?
    • A Russian Approach to Interagency Cooperation
    • A Turkish View of the Wagner Group in Syria
    • Arresting Iranian Cyber Criminals
    • Azerbaijan and Georgia Increase Bilateral Security Cooperation
    • Beyond Bitcoin: Could China Embrace Blockchain for Defense and Security Applications?
    • Boko Haram Repeats Chibok Kidnapping, Now in Dapchi
    • Bombs Detonated on Ferry and Tourist Vessel in Mexico
    • Brazil Has a Border Problem
    • China Commits to Building Global Satellite Communication Network by 2023
    • China Seeks Extradition of Detained Uyghurs in Malaysia
    • China’s Focus on the Development of “High-Quality Weapons and Equipment” for the Navy
    • Colombian Forces Fight the ELN
    • Concern in Kazakhstan over Returning Foreign Fighters from Syria
    • Continuing Violence in Mexico Fuels Armored Car Business
    • Covert Supply Lines
    • Cracks in Bolivarian Military Morale
    • Cristina Fernández’s Legal Jeopardy
    • Elections in Colombia
    • Elections in Cuba
    • Elections in El Salvador
    • Escalation in Syria?
    • Fact or Psychological Warfare? China’s Development of the World’s Strongest Individual Firepower System
    • Impact of Odebrecht Scandal on Peruvian Economy
    • Interview with Russian Navy Commander Admiral Korolev
    • Iran Unveils New Anti-Armor Missile
    • Iran: Israel’s Missile Defense Can Be Overwhelmed
    • Iran: Muslims Supported by US, UK are Illegitimate
    • Iran: Supreme Leader Advisor Lauds Russian Strategic Ties
    • Iranian Environmentalists Arrested as Spies
    • Is China Practicing “Debt-Trap Diplomacy” in Africa?
    • Local Debate on AMISOM: Should It Stay or Should It Go?
    • New Russian Officer Code of Conduct
    • Nigeria’s Environmental Devastation Drives Conflict
    • “Holy Defense:” Hezbollah’s New First-Person Shooter Video Game
  • +OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 03, Mar 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • +Monographs, Papers and Special Essays (PDF To Text Conversion)

Is China Practicing “Debt-Trap Diplomacy” in Africa?

OE Watch Commentary: There are some who might view Chinese investment in African nations as simply providing assistance for infrastructure development. As the accompanying article from the Institute for Security Studies (an organization based in South Africa) explains, the problem is Africa might be selling its future to China in what has been described as “debt-trap diplomacy.” One need only look at Sri Lanka to see what can happen when China offers easy – some might say addictive – money that comes without the same, or what might be seen as strict, conditions of Western lenders. Post civil-war Sri Lanka turned to what it believed was its benevolent friend, China, to help finance its reconstruction. The money flowed in, but the country developed economic problems causing the debt burden to become untenable. In lieu of repayment, Sri Lanka relinquished majority control over its strategic port of Hambantota. Outrage ensued across Sri Lanka with accusations that such debt-trap diplomacy poses a threat to the sovereignty of developing, but vulnerable nations. Now, many wonder if Africa is falling into the same trap.

In Africa, as happened in Sri Lanka, loans are collateralized with long-term high value assets, such as ports or mineral resources. In return for financing and sometimes even building the infrastructure these countries need to exploit their own natural resources, China frequently requires favorable access to those very same resources. This arrangement, sometimes described as “tied-aid,” not only benefits Chinese companies, but also provides China with economic penetration and strategic leverage in the host country.

Perhaps nowhere on the African continent is China’s strategy so pronounced as in Djibouti. So far, Chinese financing has helped this tiny, coastal, cash-strapped nation with several large infrastructure projects, including a new port, two new airports, and the Djibouti-Ethiopia railroad. This influx of Chinese money and the growing debt Djibouti owes has some in that African nation concerned, with one deputy from the National Assembly declaring that China is going to take the port, just as it did in Sri Lanka. Djibouti, by no coincidence, is also where China has established its first military base overseas. This base, as the article’s author notes, is the first pearl in China’s “String of Pearls,” a geopolitical theory describing Chinese ambitions to have a secure sea route in the Indian Ocean connecting China to the Middle East.

Although China’s financing is described as predatory, the article points out how African political leaders are often complicit in these deals. While not excusing their actions, it should however be noted that often these countries with their low credit ratings, narrow revenue bases, and undiversified economies find it difficult to obtain financing through Western sources. Still, it is those very same economic problems that make it likely a country will default on its loan, allowing China to acquire the resources it had agreed to as collateral.

Some argue that many African leaders could be savvier in their negotiations with the Chinese, or even possibly use their relationship with China to encourage Western powers to be more willing to finance riskier infrastructure projects. Meanwhile, there is growing concern that African nations will suffer a similar fate as Sri Lanka, trapping themselves in a never-ending debt servitude and perhaps losing a piece of their sovereignty in the process. End OE Watch Commentary (Feldman)

 “Given Africa’s huge reliance on China as a source of funding, there is concern that African states will suffer a similar fate to Sri Lanka – and unwittingly become pawns in China’s global strategic agenda.”
 Source: Ronak Gopaldas, “Lessons from Sri Lanka on China’s debt-trap diplomacy,” Institute for Security Studies (South Africa), 21 February 2018. https://issafrica.org/iss-today/lessons-from-sri-lanka-on-chinas-debt-trapdiplomacy

Given Africa’s huge reliance on China as a source of funding, there is concern that African states will suffer a similar fate to Sri Lanka – and unwittingly become pawns in China’s global strategic agenda.

With the West in retreat and focusing on internal issues, China is asserting a more muscular approach across Africa. As Africa’s main trading partner since 2008, China is securing a long-term ‘ foothold’, where it can do business and also ensure the security of its citizens and companies.

Many states would have to resort to payments ‘in kind’ – which effectively amounts to a country handing the asset back to China a la Sri Lanka. This has led to Beijing’s role in Africa being criticized by Western governments and some Africans as neo-colonial.

However while there is a tendency to paint China’s financing as predatory, African political elites are also complicit, argues China-Africa expert Dr Lucy Corkin. Blaming China provides a convenient scapegoat but doesn’t absolve governments from brokering shoddy deals that don’t benefit their people.

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