China’s regional power shift: Silk Road and Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank

by Team FNVA
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Srikanth Kondapalli
​The Economic Times
March 31, 2015​

China let the cat out of the bag at the Bo Ao Forum for Asia, where President Xi Jinping stated that the recent initiatives of the Silk Road and Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) will include “China’s friends and partners”, in addition to any country which is willing to join this coalition – indicating to the emerging power transition at the Asian level. This is not surprising given the statement by President Xi at last May’s CICA summit meeting at Shanghai that Asian security issues have to be dealt by the Asians. This reminds one of what China’s founding leader Mao Zedong once said about “setting up a different kitchen”. Although Mao’s 1949 statement is targeted against Kuomintang, sixty years later, China clearly has the United States in mind.

China’s plan, unveiled formally at the Bo Ao forum, contains modest principles– with ​the​ ​United​ ​Nations​ ​Charteras the basis. Mentioned in 2013 during President Xi Jinping’s visits to Kazakhstan and Indonesia, the Silk Road initiative connects an ambitious area of Europe with Asia and Africa, including the Indian Ocean region. This region has 4.4 billion people, constituting 63% of the global population and with a combined GDP of $21 trillion. As China’s growth is slowing down from double digits to about 7% in the “new normal”, such an ambitious pancontinental connectivity provides China an opportunity to lift its profile, provide market access to its manufactured goods, avenue for its excessive capacities and contribute to renminbi internationalisation and at the same time under-cut the US rebalance towards the Asia-Pacific.

The five goals outlined as a part of this initiative, viz., “policy coordination, facilities connectivity, unimpeded trade, financial integration and people-to-people bonds”, make clear China’s leading role in this initiative.

At a time when the US and European states, after the financial crisis, had initiated trade protectionism and market regulation, China stated the basic principle of the Silk Road initiative will be to give “decisive role of the market in resource allocation and the primary role of enterprises, and let the governments perform their due functions”. The action plan remains innocent and modest, with “cooperation, harmony and inclusiveness, market operation and mutual benefit”, although in actual practice, which country dominates the processes is anybody’s guess. A number of smaller countries are likely to jump onto this bandwagon. Already, over 60 countries have expressed interest in the Silk Road initiative and 40 more have lined up for the AIIB, including US allies. So when President Xi stated at Bo Ao that this Chinese song is not a “solo”, but a “but a chorus sung by countries along the route”, he is proposing a united front of like-minded partners.

Of course, Xi assuaged the feeling of the by-standers by suggesting that the Silk Road initiative and the AIIB will follow the principles of “wide consultation, joint contribution and shared benefits”. That needs to be seen. While China’s initiative spoke about “respecting each other’s sovereignty and security concerns”, one of the projects, the $45.6 b Sino-Pak Economic Belt, announced during PM Nawaz Sharif’s visit to Beijing last year, could become controversial as it passes through the disputed Northern Areas of Kashmir. Also, it has to be seen whether the initiative will facilitate India to build projects in Arunachal Pradesh. A few years ago, China vetoed an ADB proposal for infrastructure development in Arunachal.

(The author is a JNU professor in Chinese Studies)

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