Chinese and US Engagement with Developing Countries News Roundup: Feb.1 – Feb.12, 2019
作者: 来源:US-China Perception Monitor
Every two weeks, The Carter Center’s China Program releases an overview of major events involving Chinese and US global engagement, with a particular focus on emerging issues in Africa and Latin America. In addition to using news sources, the news roundup will analyze papers and reports from academic journals, governmental bodies, and NGOs, and will also summarize debates and other events organized by think tanks on select issues. The news roundup is intended to be a platform and resource for both China watchers and for readers interested in political and economic development in developing countries. It aims to deepen the understanding of China’s foreign policy, and emerging issues and trends in developing countries, as well as to enhance the prospect of multinational cooperation among China, the U.S., Africa and Latin America.
CHINA’S RISE:
The Unpredictable
Rise of China
(The Atlantic, Daniel
Blumenthal) 2019-02-03
(Donald Trump meets with China’s Vice Premier, Liu He, on January 31, 2019.JIM YOUNG / REUTERS)
Daniel Blumenthal,
director of Asian Studies at the American Enterprise Institute, discusses the
common misconceptions in the West regarding both China’s desire and ability to
overtake the United States as the leader of the international system.
Blumenthal argues that China’s increasing global involvement and ramp up of
domestic security measures may indicate growing power but that conversely,
China is on the verge of a downfall, as it is facing a buildup of internal
political issues and a weakening economy. Additionally, he states that China’s
rise and goal of rejuvenation does not mean that Beijing is trying to claim
power over the entire world but that it just wants to reclaim the political and
cultural importance it once had. This is not to say China is not growing in
geo-political and -economic importance; it’s Belt and Road Initiative is
undoubtedly improving its relations with critical neighbors and various
developing countries. However, Blumenthal believes that China’s rise may not be
as predictable or threatening as many political science theorists may
think.
China’s Rise and
(Under?) Balancing in the Indo-Pacific: Putting Realist Theory to the
Test
(War on the Rocks,
Jeff M. Smith) 2019-01-08
Jeff M. Smith, a
Research Fellow in the Heritage Foundation’s Asian Studies Center, discusses
realist theory’s predictions of balancing against China’s rise in the
Indo-Pacific and where the theory’s predictions have held true versus the
differences between the predictions and reality. He points to a general
regional increase in military spending and defense collaboration and China’s
deteriorating relations with the “Quad” (Australia, India, Japan, and the
United States) as examples of Indo-Pacific nations’ balancing against China’s
growing power. However, Smith states that what is more significant is the lack
of balancing in the economic and diplomatic sectors. Most Indo-Pacific
countries have actually greatly increased
trade and investment with China. Consequently, he says, any hard acts of
balancing by countries that are so deeply connected to China economically pose
the risk of threatening their own economic prosperity, rendering them less
likely. This economic independency caused by China’s investment in foreign
countries, especially lesser-developed nations, creates an environment in which
traditional balancing against China’s rise, should it pose a threat to them, is
more costly to them and therefore more improbable.
China’s Grand Strategy
(Forbes, Daniel
Araya) 2019-01-14
(Solar energy in the forest GETTY)
Daniel Araya, a
Forbes Contributor and policy analyst, lays out China’s shift to advanced
technologies, which can be promoted by the expansive trade network offered by
the Belt and Road Initiative and the threat this poses to existing
industrialized democracies. Specifically, many countries are worried about
Chinese companies’, which they suspect are controlled by the government, heavy
involvement and subsequent influence in Africa and Latin America. Where the
United States is retreating, Chinese conglomerates are stepping in to offer
investment in a wide array of needed areas- such as infrastructure,
agriculture, telecommunications, and more. Latin America and China now enjoy a
relationship in which China is Latin America’s largest creditor, and Latin
America is the second largest recipient of Chinese foreign direct investment.
Araya argues that skeptical Western economies should be wary of China’s grand
strategy, which he believes is to ultimately cultivate long-term new markets
for its new advanced technology sector.
The Coming China
Shock
(Project Syndicate,
Arvind Subramanian and Josh Felman) 2019-02-06
Arvind Subramanian
and Josh Felman argue that China’s economic exceptionalism, led by a unique and
norm-defying development model, will expire soon due to its internal debts and
foreign overinvestment. They expect that China will not be able to continue
defying typical economic development trends, which suggest that economies
succeed more in open political climates, which foster competition, innovation,
confidence, and dynamism. Their concern is that China may either need to or
choose to depreciate the renminbi, leading to a global wave of deflation and
devaluation, which would be detrimental to the global economy. The authors warn
that this “China shock” is inevitable and that the rest of the world should
prepare itself.
AFRICA:
Competing Against Chinese
Loans, U.S. Companies Face Long Odds in Africa
(The New York Times,
Edward Wong) 2019-01-13
(An access tunnel in the Karuma hydroelectric power station project, which is under construction on the Nile in northern Uganda. A Chinese contractor is building the power station, the first of its kind in Africa.CreditCreditJoao Silva/The New York Times)
The United States is
scrambling to help U.S. businesses compete on the same level as Chinese
businesses do in Africa, as shown by Washington’s new Africa strategy, aimed at
challenging Chinese infrastructure investment. However, African leaders, such
as Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, have acknowledged that the U.S. seems to
be late to the game, whereas China has shown this level of attention to Africa for
much longer. Museveni also acknowledged the competition between the U.S. and
China in Africa and asked why African nations shouldn’t take advantage of both
powers? Edward Wong outlines many examples of U.S. companies competing with
Chinese companies for various project proposals, often with the Chinese bid
winning out due to financing concerns.
Bolton Outlines a
Strategy for Africa That’s Really About Countering China
(The New York Times,
Mark Landler and Edward Wong) 2018-12-13
Last month, John R.
Bolton, President Trump’s national security advisor, outlined the Trump
administration’s new Africa strategy, which placed the continent as a critical
arena for the U.S. to compete with China, which he named as a greater threat to
African nations than poverty or terrorism. He also rolled out the U.S.’ new
program, “Prosper Africa”, which seeks to offer an American alternative to
Chinese Belt and Road infrastructure investment. However, experts like Grant T.
Harris have criticized the U.S.’ purely economic approach to involvement in
Africa, highlighting China’s success in fostering high-level communication and
people-to-people relationships. Another key aspect of the new Africa strategy
is that the U.S. intends to be harsh on countries or leaders that aren’t
effectively making use of the aid provided. The Trump administration needs to
prove that it can treat African nations with the same level of respect China
does if it wants to have similar success in the region.
LATIN AMERICA:
China and Russia
Loaned Billions to Venezuela—and Then the Presidency Went Up for Grabs
(CNBC, MacKenzie Sigalos)
2019-02-07
(Andy Wong, Pool | Getty Images
Over the past decade, China and Russia have loaned tens of billions of dollars to Venezuela in order to access the cheap oil available there. However, as Venezuela is amidst a power struggle between dictator Nicolas Maduro, who China and Russia worked with to strike these lending deals, and opposition leader Juan Guaido, backed by the United States, Beijing and Moscow face concerns that the billions of dollars of debt owed to them will never be paid back. There are reasons to believe that if Guaido assumes power, Venezuela’s relationship with China may persevere: China is Venezuela’s biggest market, and Beijing might be incentivized to support Guaido, so as not to exacerbate current tensions with the United States.
Washington Can Learn
from China’s Moves in Latin America
(Real Clear World,
Jason Marczak) 2019-02-04
Whereas China’s trade
relationship with Latin American nations have traditionally been centered
around the import of Chinese manufactured goods, there is now a shift towards
services and value-added goods. Through its significant increase and spread of
foreign direct investment in Latin America, Beijing intends on helping
transform Latin America into a new, more developed region. As trade tensions
with the United States grow, so too does China’s involvement and influence in
Latin America. Jason Marczak, Director of the Adrienne Arsht Latin
America Center at the Atlantic Council, argues that the United States should
recognize the importance of Latin America and emulate China’s show of efforts
in the region. He suggests that the U.S. needs to pay more attention to Latin
American relations now sooner than later so that it doesn’t miss out on the
burgeoning economic opportunity there.
Salvadoran President-Elect
to Assess Relationship with China: Aide
(Rueters,
Nelson Renteria & Sandra Maler) 2019-02-07
(Presidential candidate Nayib Bukele of the Great National Alliance (GANA) speaks during a news conference after the presidential election in San Salvador, El Salvador, February 3, 2019. REUTERS/Jose Cabezas)
Frederico Anliker, a
member of Salvadoran President-elect Nayib Bukele’s team,
said Thursday that the Bukele team
will reassess El Salvador’s decision to break diplomatic ties with Taiwan in
favor of China, which occurred in August 2018. Anliker commented that El
Salvador’s previous administration did not justify this decision, and the new
administration wants to investigate the issue of China, cross-Strait relations,
and El Salvador’s economic ties with China in order to determine what would be
“best for the nation, not what is best for a political party”.
Latin America and the
US-China Agenda
(China-US Focus, Eric
Farnsworth) 2019-01-28
Eric Farnsworth, Vice
President of Council of the Americas, says that Presidents Donald Trump and Xi
Jinping should gave talked in more depth about issues in Latin America, as these
issues are continuing to grow in severity and relevance. One such issue is
Panama, El Salvador, and the Dominican Republic’s decisions to break ties with
Taiwan in favor of Beijing, which the United States has spoken out about and
may act against by removing preferential trade benefits from those countries.
The U.S. has also maintained a steady dialogue of “warning” Latin American
countries about possible downsides to economic involvement with China.
Farnsworth argues that rather than competing for regional influence, Washington
and Beijing should prioritize looking for intersections of their interests and
work in order to preemptively address potential conflicts or difficulties in
the area. He ends the article by reiterating the necessity of U.S.-China upper
level dialogue on Latin American issues at these kinds of meetings.
来源时间:2019/2/12 发布时间:2019/7/12
旧文章ID:19023