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China reaps rewards of helping Africa's decolonialism struggle
when few would

 


GIVEN the low priority of Africa in China's overall foreign strategic thinking, a disproportionate level of attention is paid to its African involvement - with reason.

China is now Africa's biggest trading partner, having surpassed the United States in 2009. By the end of that year, 45.7 per cent of China's cumulative foreign aid of US$41.2 billion had been given to Africa.

Of course, when China was the poorest of the poor in the 1950s, it stood by rebel guerrilla forces (which have since become legitimate national armies) against African colonial regimes. China armed them, and on independence put in roads and railways. A grateful Mozambique even graced its flag with a Chinese AK-47 assault rifle.

Among the most notable early projects was the 1,860-kilometre TAZARA Railway, linking Zambia and Tanzania, which China helped to finance and build from 1970 to 1975.

Some 50,000 Chinese engineers and workers sent to Africa to complete the project. By 1978, China was giving aid to more African countries than the United States.

Without the colonial baggage of Western powers, and a record of offering a helping hand when few would, China has reaped the rewards. More than 80 per cent of China's $93.2 billion in imports from Africa in 2011 were crude oil, raw materials and resources.

South Africa is China's largest trading partner in Africa, at a volume of $20.2 billion. Yet this is four per cent of China's trade with the European Union.

Last year, Lagos's Initiative for Public Policy Analysis (IPPA) undertook a study of the impact of Chinese involvement in Africa, and said Beijing demanded few in any conditions from aid recipient, attaching far fewer strings than western powers did - for better or worse.

Loans from China provided an alternative source of capital, which has weakened the position of the World Bank. China's Overseas Development Assistance has freed African nations from tight fiscal control, transparency and the rule of law and democracy, condition attached to aid from western countries.

Unconditional and low-rate credit lines (rates at 1.5 per cent over 15 years to 20 years) have taken the place of the more restricted and conditional Western loans. Since 2000, more than $10 billion in debt owed by African nations to China has been cancelled, says Wikipedia.

The Chinese were also willing to put money in infrastructure when western aid givers demurred, preferring to fund education and health care projects instead.

But China has been active here too. Between the early 1960s and 2005, more than 15,000 Chinese doctors have been to Africa to treat 170 million patients over this period.

There are 800 Chinese companies doing business in Africa, most in the private sector investing in the infrastructure, energy and banking.

IPPA researchers Thompson Ayodele and Olusegun Sotola found that 60 per cent of Chinese exports were destined for only six countries. The Nigerian team also found that fears that China was stripping Africa of its oil were groundless. Only nine per cent of Chinese oil is imported from Africa while 62 per cent comes from the Mideast. This compares to 32 per cent of US oil imports coming from Africa and 33 per cent of Europe's.

"In terms of infrastructure projects, Chinese financing rose $1 billion in 2003, to $7 billion in 2006," said the IPPA paper.

"China's aid is characterised by equality and mutual respect for the sovereignty of the recipient countries. The loans are not conditional, interest free and repayment can be easily rescheduled," they said.

The drivers of the Chinese engagement are a need to shore up supplies of natural resources, particularly oil, and to create a voracious market for its exports - and well as projecting an image of a global super-power, they said.

Both China state-owned enterprises and private sector concerns are involved in Africa. However their guiding philosophies are quite different, "While the state-owned enterprises are driven by the state's interest to invest heavily in the extractive sector, Chinese private companies are driven by profit and the goal of creating lasting economic opportunities for a host of countries," they said.

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