China: Strike while the iron is hot
China’s Premier Li Keqiang, accompanied by over 100 senior Chinese business leaders, visited four South American countries for eight days in May. Along the way, he pledged hundreds of billions of dollars to Brazil, Peru, Chile, and Colombia. US$53 billion was announced for Brazil alone.
The Chinese pledges were met with scepticism by Western analysts who fret over the presence of China “in America’s backyard”. They used a study, conducted by the Brazil-China Business Council to argue that only around one-third of China’s promised investments in Brazil from 2007-2012 were actually done. While there is no reason to doubt the findings of the study, there is equally no reason to believe that the failure to make the investments rested with China alone. Brazil could have also have contributed by its inability to absorb the investments. In several Caribbean countries, for instance, Chinese offers to undertake projects have either been ignored or the countries have lacked the capacity to implement them.
In any event, even if half of the monies promised by China flows into the four South American nations, they will benefit enormously from the build-out of much-needed infrastructure to boost their economies. The Chinese money — Western scepticism notwithstanding — is important.
Caribbean economies can also do with more investment from China in a range of sectors if they are to overcome the lingering effects of the global financial crisis of 2008 and the recession that followed. But to do so, the China-Caribbean relationship needs to be improved and put on a more predictable and certain footing.
What is sure about the Caribbean’s relationship with China is that the latter now enjoys a huge trade surplus. In 2013, China’s exports to the Caribbean totalled US$4.21 billion, more than double its imports from the region valued at US$1.88 billion that year. The sum of US$3 billion, pledged for loans in 2013 by China’s President Xi to 10 Caribbean countries, was less than China’s trade surplus with the region for the year 2012 alone. In other words, China recycled its trade surplus with the region for one year to finance its loans to regional countries from which it earns interest and gains political credit.
The huge trade imbalance is a crucial area that needs urgent attention. Even though the Caribbean accounts for less than one per cent of China’s trade with the world, its trade deficit with China is significant to the Caribbean. The Chinese authorities appear to have recognised this issue. That’s why President Xi offered the 2012 trade surplus as loans to the region. It was a classic case of aid for trade.
But the relationship between China and Caribbean countries ought not to operate on an ad hoc basis, nor should it be reliant only on what China is willing to offer.
The region does have some bargaining capacity, and it should use it collectively. The five elements of its capability are:
1. the trade surplus that China enjoys with the region;
2. the financial return to China of investments, including loans made to regional countries;
3. the valuable products China is securing from the region such as forestry, petroleum and minerals;
4. political support of Caribbean countries for China’s interests in international organisations and in the global community; and
5. the region’s strategic importance to China because of its proximity to the United States major maritime trade routes and infrastructure such as the Panama Canal.
Ideally, China should be persuaded to ease its protectionist trade policies and open its market to the 14 independent members of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) on a non-reciprocal basis to give the region a chance to narrow the trade surplus. China should also expand its investment in the region to help build much-needed infrastructure and to boost sectors such as agriculture, financial services, tourism, sea transportation, and manufacturing. In making such investments, China should also stop making the use of Chinese workers and equipment a condition. As long as this condition continues, the positive impact of these investments on employment will not be fully realised and will fan a flame of resentment.
Of course, the Caricom countries are divided in relation to China. Five of them continue to have diplomatic ties to Taiwan and this inhibits Caricom from seeking to establish a structured, long-term aid, trade and investment relationship with China. The consequence is that each of the other nine Caricom members pursue individual relations with China in which they are disadvantaged, but nonetheless grateful. However imperfect loan and investment arrangements might be with China, these governments are, at least, getting monies that no other country or agency is advancing to them. Further, the monies are being provided on soft terms.
China is demonstrating a willingness to invest. It is putting huge sums of money into South America as Premier Li’s recent tour demonstrates. In the case of the Caribbean, through two Chinese State-owned banks, China Export-Import Bank and China Development Bank, China has disbursed tens of billions of dollars to Caricom countries since 2005.
But more can be done by China in the Caribbean if a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with strong provisions for development assistance could be negotiated and established. On his South American tour, Premier Li discussed the possibility of an FTA with Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos. The matter is therefore occupying the minds of China’s leaders. Undoubtedly, there will be a few South American countries that will conclude such FTAs with China in the near future.
If the Caribbean region is to benefit from China’s obvious interest in investing its considerable foreign reserves around the world, it has to engage the Chinese Government collectively. The reluctance to do so by the five Caricom countries that continue to gain from their relations with Taiwan is understandable, but they should give their blessings to the other nine member states to strike an enhanced relationship with China while the iron is hot.
Sir Ronald Sanders is an international affairs consultant; senior fellow at Massey College, Toronto, and the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, London; and former Caribbean diplomat. Send responses to and view previous commentaries at www.sirronaldsanders.com.