China’s provision of development finance
to the emerging world has always been about much more than building
infrastructure to reap a commercial return. It has also been about changing
destinies. Beijing selected countries that it aimed to lift from poverty, while
forging political alliances and creating markets for Chinese goods. The
defining characteristic of China’s power projection is its ability to get
things done. Thus, a mounting economic crisis in Venezuela comes as a big blow.
Caracas is the biggest client of China’s state-orchestrated development
lending, accepting some $65bn in loans since 2007 for projects such as oil
refineries, gold mines and railways. But in May this year, Venezuela engineered
a default under which it has deferred paying the principal — and only honours
the interest — on outstanding debts estimated at $20bn-$24bn. More… Monday, October 17, 2016
What China can learn from its Venezuela blow
China’s provision of development finance
to the emerging world has always been about much more than building
infrastructure to reap a commercial return. It has also been about changing
destinies. Beijing selected countries that it aimed to lift from poverty, while
forging political alliances and creating markets for Chinese goods. The
defining characteristic of China’s power projection is its ability to get
things done. Thus, a mounting economic crisis in Venezuela comes as a big blow.
Caracas is the biggest client of China’s state-orchestrated development
lending, accepting some $65bn in loans since 2007 for projects such as oil
refineries, gold mines and railways. But in May this year, Venezuela engineered
a default under which it has deferred paying the principal — and only honours
the interest — on outstanding debts estimated at $20bn-$24bn. More…
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