China’s President Xi Jinping and African leaders hailed their shared future as they opened a three-yearly summit, whilst debt burdens, tensions over commerce imbalances and rising geopolitical rivalries forged shadows over Beijing’s relationships on the continent.
African leaders from 50 nations arrived in Beijing this week for the summit, which ends on Friday with a blueprint for China-Africa relations till 2027.
“On the road to modernisation . . . not a single country should fall behind,” Xi advised the leaders in his opening speech to the discussion board on Thursday.
He pledged Rmb360bn ($51bn) in monetary assist over the subsequent three years together with loans, help and Chinese company funding in addition to help for African nations to problem renminbi-denominated “panda bonds” in China’s onshore markets. He additionally laid out a 10-point plan overlaying commerce, agriculture and safety, in addition to providing “governance” and navy coaching.
Beijing is eager to leverage its dominance as Africa’s largest buying and selling associate to seal profitable mining offers and export alternatives to assist its struggling financial system, in response to analysts, whereas keeping off geopolitical rivals on the continent, together with the US.
For their half, African leaders need Beijing to deal with a commerce imbalance that has allowed China to devour the area’s uncooked supplies, akin to iron ore and oil, whereas exporting manufactured items that undercut home manufacturing. China’s commerce surplus with the continent is about $64bn.
“You’re going to see requests [from African leaders] for infrastructure finance, whether it’s for energy or transport and roads or ports, and for support around industrialisation initiatives,” mentioned Zainab Usman, senior fellow and director of the Africa Program on the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
She mentioned this could cowl the processing and refining of crucial minerals and associated manufacturing, akin to in clear power. “This is a huge area right now for a lot of African countries,” she mentioned.
In 2023, China accredited loans of $4.61bn for eight African nations and two regional monetary establishments — the primary time the annual mortgage quantity for the continent has risen since 2016.
But this stays far beneath the peak of Xi’s signature Belt and Road Initiative, when common annual commitments surpassed $10bn, in response to the Chinese Loans to Africa Database of the Boston University Global Development Policy Center. From 2000-2023, Chinese loans to Africa totalled $182.28bn.
For Xi, who earlier within the week hailed China’s “shared future” with African nations, an important precedence is avoiding additional debt issues, analysts mentioned.
With China’s funds already stretched by a deep property sector slowdown, Beijing favours smaller authorities lending and better involvement by state-owned enterprises or personal sector buyers.
Zambia defaulted on its debt in 2020, adopted by Ghana and, extra lately, Ethiopia, with a dozen different African nations dealing with debt strains. Angola owes China about $17bn, greater than one-third of its exterior debt.
“Financing is a big theme given the state of debt in the African countries. There’s lots of talk about extending concessional financing, restructuring debt,” mentioned a senior financial official of a Horn of Africa nation in Beijing.
The sluggish debt renegotiations, particularly with Zambia, have sparked criticism of China’s position. But Tang Xiaoyang, a professor and China discussion board skilled at Tsinghua University, objected to the notion that “if a country borrows money and they have problems, that the blame should fall on China” regardless of the area’s speedy escalation of Chinese debt.
Despite the continent’s debt woes — and the poor report of some BRI initiatives — African leaders have stepped up requires extra funding in bilateral conferences with Xi.
In Kenya, for instance, the $5bn Chinese-funded normal gauge railway linking the port metropolis of Mombasa to the capital Nairobi has been criticised as economically unviable and never benefiting native communities.
But this week, Kenya’s president William Ruto — whose predecessor borrowed closely from Beijing — advised Xi {that a} projected growth of the railway to Uganda and past was one among “Kenya’s top priorities in the engagement with China”. He additionally named different initiatives in want of funding, together with highways.
Kenya this week additionally formally joined the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the Beijing-led different to the World Bank.
South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa praised “an increase in our bilateral trade”, but additionally urged Beijing to import extra items and construct extra factories in Africa’s most industrialised nation, together with a name for China’s BYD and CATL to put money into electrical automotive and battery manufacturing.
He added that South Africa “would like to narrow the trade deficit and address the structure of our trade . . . we urge for more sustainable manufacturing and job-creating investments”.
Other nations lodging requests embody Nigeria, which is searching for investments in manufacturing and power infrastructure whereas Zambia needs new investments in crucial mineral processing and copper.
Zambia would even be a beneficiary of a plan to revamp the Tazara railway, one of many highest-profile offers to be mentioned on the summit.
The $1bn refurbishment of the road, which was constructed within the Nineteen Seventies with Chinese assist underneath Mao Zedong and connects Zambia to Tanzania, will eschew borrowing and lift money via a concession to Chinese buyers as Beijing retools its method in direction of extra direct funding.
“We are still going to see Chinese investments in infrastructure,” mentioned Cliff Mboya, a fellow on the Center for Africa-China Studies on the University of Johannesburg. But new initiatives will pursue “innovative ways of funding”.
Looming over the Tazara challenge is geopolitics. The renovated line will compete with a revamped US-backed railway working from the central African copper belt to Angola’s Atlantic coast — one indication of western nations more and more courting African leaders for entry to crucial minerals following an extended interval the place they gave China little competitors.
However, whereas the US and others had been changing into extra energetic within the continent, China retained an edge via robust people-to-people ties and its narrative of being a “developing country” aiding its companions within the international south alongside the trail of industrialisation, mentioned Jana de Kluiver, analysis officer on the Institute for Security Studies in Pretoria, South Africa.
The US technique, against this, got here throughout as “being more of an anti-China policy than an Africa policy”, she mentioned.