If Beijing sneezes, Kenya will catch a bad cold

Geza Ulole

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If Beijing sneezes, East Africa will catch a bad cold
SUNDAY MARCH 11 2018

Kenya's National Treasury minister Henry Rotich. The Treasury said any disruption to China’s economic stability could have an adverse effect on Kenya. PHOTO | NMG

In Summary
  • New data from the Centre for Global Development, an international think tank, shows that Djibouti, Kenya and Ethiopia could be economically vulnerable, with Djibouti at extreme risk, if the Chinese economy were to experience shocks.
  • China’s financial reach is evident in the region as countries continue to take up loans to finance roads, railways, airports and other mega infrastructure projects, making it an increasingly important financial influence on the world stage.
  • Visiting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said on Thursday that African countries should be careful not to forfeit their sovereignty when they accept loans from China, the continent’s biggest trading partner.


By ALLAN OLINGO
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East Africa has been flagged as one of the regions that could experience shocks in the event the Chinese economy suffers a meltdown, given the states’ heavy borrowing from the Asian giant.

New data from the Centre for Global Development, an international think tank, shows that Djibouti, Kenya and Ethiopia could be economically vulnerable, with Djibouti at extreme risk, if the Chinese economy were to experience shocks.

China’s financial reach is evident in the region as countries continue to take up loans to finance roads, railways, airports and other mega infrastructure projects, making it an increasingly important financial influence on the world stage.

As part of the Belt and Road Initiative, 68 countries, a majority in Africa, owe China. Beijing is planning $8 trillion in deals that could leave some of these countries vulnerable.

Already, Kenya has indicated this as a risk in the prospectus of its recent $2 billion Eurobond, saying that China being its largest creditor, any adverse effects on its economy could impact Nairobi’s future borrowing ability.

“As at June 30, 2017, outstanding bilateral external debt due to China (excluding Chinese commercial banks) amounted to $4.6 billion, making China Kenya’s largest creditor,” the Treasury said in the document.

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“Kenya’s reliance on China for such a significant portion of its bilateral external debt and a key financing source to various infrastructure projects means that any disruption to China’s economic stability could have an adverse effect on Kenya’s ability to increase bilateral borrowings from the country in the future.”

In 2017, various ministries and corporations in Kenya, such as the Ministry of Energy and Kenya Power and Lighting Co Ltd, took out loans from the Exim Bank of China amounting to $1.2 billion and $537.58 million respectively. The debt matures between 2030 and 2040. The loans, the government said, were used to fund certain infrastructure and electricity projects.

A debt report released in December 2017 shows that Beijing gobbled up nearly half of the funds Kenya spent on external debt repayments in the three months ended September 2017.

Nairobi spent $122.7 million to service loans from China in the first quarter of the 2017/18 financial year, accounting for 48.26 per cent of what it used to service foreign debt. This was 70.69 per cent of the $179.9 million total repayments to bilateral creditors.

The repayments to China were second to International Development Association, the country’s largest multilateral lender, at $39.06 million.

The Centre for Global Development report has evaluated the current and future debt levels of the 68 countries hosting the China-funded projects and found that 23, including Kenya, are at the risk of debt distress. In eight of those countries, future Chinese financing will significantly add to the risk of debt distress.

“If the China Belt and Road Initiative follows Chinese practices for infrastructure financing — which often entail lending to sovereign borrowers — then BRI raises the risk of debt distress in some borrower countries,” said John Hurley, a visiting fellow at the CGD and a co-author of the report.

According to the report, China’s record in managing debt distress on the part of its borrowers has been problematic and, unlike the world’s other leading government creditors like the World Bank and IMF, Beijing has not signed binding rules to avoid unsustainable lending and address debt problems when they arise.

“Our research makes it clear that China needs to adopt standards and improve its debt practices,” said Scott Morris, senior fellow at the CGD and a co-author of the paper.

China’s share of debt in Djibouti, the site of its only overseas military base, will rise from 85 per cent to 91 per cent of GDP as a result of infrastructure funding.

Visiting US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said on Thursday that African countries should be careful not to forfeit their sovereignty when they accept loans from China, the continent’s biggest trading partner.

“We are not attempting to keep Chinese dollars from Africa,” Tillerson told a news conference in Addis Ababa. “It is important that African countries carefully consider the terms of those agreements and not forfeit their sovereignty.”

If Beijing sneezes, East Africa will catch a bad cold
 
China is pushing Africa into debt, says America’s top diplomat

By Abdi Latif Dahir & Yomi Kazeem

March 07, 2018

Critical of China.

US secretary of State Rex Tillerson has criticized China’s model of economic development in Africa, saying it encouraged dependency and denied governments long-term democratic growth.

Tillerson said China used corruption and predatory loan practices to undermine African governments and mire them in debt. That was in contrast, he added, to US efforts to bolster democratic institutions, strengthen the rule of law, and improve governance and long-term security goals. He was speaking at George Mason University in Virginia on the eve of his first official trip to Africa.

Tillerson’s speech was an apparent takedown of China’s deepening engagement across Africa in the last decade. The country has financed mega infrastructural projects, building railways in countries like Kenya, and establishing factories in Lesotho, Namibia, and Ethiopia. Africa is also where China is exercising its first major moves as a global power, opening up a base in Djibouti and deploying peacekeepers in South Sudan, Mali, Liberia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Beijing is also bringing thousands of African leaders, bureaucrats, students, and business people to China, in the hopes of cultivating the next generation of African leaders.



Yet Chinese aid has also been blamed for propping up authoritarian regimes, building shoddy roads and infrastructure built by imported Chinese workers, and focusing mainly on countries home to oil, minerals, and other resources that China needs. In January, China was accused of bugging the African Union headquarters in Ethiopia which it “gifted” to the continental body in 2012.

“Chinese investment does have the potential to address Africa’s infrastructure gap, but its approach has led to mounting debt and few, if any, jobs in most countries,” Tillerson said. “When coupled with the political and fiscal pressure, this endangers Africa’s natural resources and its long-term economic political stability.”



After repeatedly demonstrating indifference and skepticism about Africa’s place in US foreign policy, Tillerson’s speech ahead of his five-nation tour was the first to offer some sense of the Trump administration’s Africa policy. During his meetings in Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya, Chad, and Nigeria, Tillerson said he will engage leaders on issues ranging from counter-terrorism and governance to trade and investment. He also lauded the success of signature George W. Bush and Barack Obama programs like Power Africa to provide electricity, the Young African Leaders Initiative to support upcoming leaders, and the PEPFAR initiative to fight HIV/Aids.

Tillerson also announced $533 million in food and health aid to Somalia, South Sudan, Ethiopia, and west and central African nations bordering the Lake Chad.

China is pushing Africa into debt, says America’s top diplomat
 
So it's an hypothetical situation you want us to discuss. We'll, ngoja wenye huwa wanadiscuss hivyo huku. Your employer is disappointed...
 
Kenya is a colony of china

Duuu kumbe wachina ni wabaya sijawahi pata kuona. Yaani wanakuingiza nyavuni huku wanajiona. WaKenya wanajiona wako smarter, waingereza wa Afrika, na wamesoma SANA. Now how comes a non English speaking Chinese made a kill before your faces. And remember your myth..... anybody who does not speak English or belong to Anglophone system is relatively less intelligence. Now how comes the Sino guys screwed you? The guys who speak only Mandarin.
Ahaaa haaa haaa.
But all in all we need to revisit Afrika - Sino relationship.
 
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