China's Loans to Sub-Saharan Africa Outweigh Those of Western Nations
A worker works on the electrified light rail transit construction site in Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa, Dec. 16, 2014. The project was built by China Railway Engineering Corporation (CREC) and mostly financed through a loan from China's Exim Bank. PHOTO/COURTESY: VOA
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Chinese banks provided
more loans to fund developmental projects in sub-Saharan Africa than some of
the world's greatest economies combined from 2007 to 2020, according to a
new report.
The Washington- and
London-based Center for Global Development on Thursday also reported that
Chinese development banks provided a whopping $23 billion to finance
public-private partnerships in the region.
The figure is more than
double the combined amount of $9.1 billion lent by banks in the U.S., Japan,
Germany, the Netherlands, France and South Africa, the report found.
"This is well short
of what the region needs for roads, dams and bridges," said Nancy Lee,
lead author of the study.
The global think tank
examined more than 500 infrastructure projects in the region with a private
sector component that reached financial closure during the period.
"There's a lot of
criticism of China, but if Western governments want to boost productive and
sustainable investments to meaningful levels, they need to deploy their own
development banks and press the multilateral development banks to make these
investments a priority," Lee said.
The report also found
that despite the 2015 "billions to trillions" vision launched by
multilateral development banks, institutions such as the World Bank provided
only $1.4 billion per year to fund infrastructure projects in sub-Saharan
Africa from 2016 to 2020.
The lack of transparency
and use of collateralized loans by China has been of great concern to
stakeholders in recent years.
Economists at the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have warned that several low-income
countries face or are already in debt distress.
Lee, a senior fellow at
the Center for Global Development, said Western countries have been slow to
hike investments despite "much rhetoric."
"There's a real
opportunity for the U.S. to provide more leadership on infrastructure finance
in Africa," Lee noted.


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