A Chinese Perspective on the African "Debt Trap" Debate

yamindinda

JF-Expert Member
Jul 29, 2011
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Aside from the politicians who attended the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation summit in Beijing earlier this, seemingly few others were pleased to hear that China is providing Africa with another massive $60 billion package of loans and grants.

In countries like Kenya and Zambia, there is widespread anger over the surging levels of debt and the lack of transparency on the part of local governments over how much money they’re borrowing from Beijing and how those funds are being used.

The mood in China was similarly negative, albeit for entirely different reasons. There were widespread denunciations of the FOCAC package among social media users, complaining that the government is giving away too much money in foreign aid while there are still between 30-50 million Chinese at home who live in dire poverty. The government’s censors responded by shutting down the discussion online, deleting critical posts and banning the use of certain keywords.

Kai Xue, a Beijing-based attorney who specializes in outbound investment in developing countries, is among a growing number of Chinese analysts who is increasingly skeptical of the government’s rationale for committing so much money to Africa when there may better opportunities for Chinese investment elsewhere, particularly along the Belt and Road Initiative global trade route.

He joins Eric & Cobus to discuss the current state of China-Africa relations and how the mood in China towards Africa appears to be changing.
 
They might not know that their country's expectation is that Africans will fail to pay back the loans and hence the Chinese will seize nearly everything from those countries.
 
Taking loans without having means and plans to repay them is foolish, You can't blame the chinese for your failures!.

The Chinese don't force you to take loans, If you seat at the negotiating table and with your sound mind negotiate deals without any coercision whatsoever, then you are wholly responsible of the aftermath. It is useless to blame the chinese for what you do with their money and eventually put yourself into.

Americans owe the chinese trillion of dollars, why on earth should they be concerned on our debt but not theirs?
 
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