Ethiopia and Zambia Are Among Fans of Continent's New
Top Trade Partner;
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Construction workers from China and Ethiopia late last year during the construction of new African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. China is footing the $200 million cost. |
By PETER WONACOTT (http://online.wsj.com)
China
is expanding its economic and political ties with countries across Africa,
resulting in a rapid rise in influence here that has sparked concern from the
U.S. government.
Beijing's
investment and aid to African countries aims to tap both natural resources and
a growing middle class. As China burrows into local economies, leaders from
South Africa to Ethiopia have been touting its model for development—one that
stresses state-led growth, validates tight-fisted political control and offers
a powerful counterpoint to the free-market democracy mantra promoted by the
U.S.
The
embrace of China in Africa's capitals stands in contrast with complaints also
voiced around the continent about Chinese firms' treatment of workers and
concerns over some companies' environmental records.
In
Zimbabwe, even opponents of President Robert Mugabe welcome China's focus on
"China's
model is telling us you can be successful without following the Western
example," said deputy prime minister Arthur Mutambara, a member of an
opposition party locked in awkward coalition with Mr. Mugabe, who has deep ties
with Beijing.
The
U.S. is the largest foreign donor to Zimbabwe, according to the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development, which doesn't count China as a
member. The U.S. funnels much of its assistance through nongovernmental
organizations, some of which are critical of Zimbabwe's government. That hasn't
gone down well with many officials. "China is my favorite country,"
said Mr. Mutambara a 45-year-old politician who attended U.S. universities.
Washington
has taken notice. Some U.S. officials say the number of governments in Africa
finding favor with China's path of development gives Chinese firms an edge over
U.S. competitors and reflects Beijing's strategic ambitions for the continent.
"It's
quite clear that the model of state-led capitalism is being used as an
instrument of China's soft power," said Robert D. Hormats, the U.S. State
Department's Under Secretary for Economic Affairs. "It's part of a broad
notion that China's economic model is successful and can be used
elsewhere."
Mr.
Hormats said Chinese investments in Africa came up at a recent meeting known as
the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue. U.S. officials have supported
Chinese investment and aid to African economies, but they have argued that
Beijing should adopt more transparent financing to combat corruption and impose
stricter environmental and labor standards to hew to global norms. Such
practices could serve China's interests, U.S. officials say, because big
projects wouldn't be tied to particular governments or officials.
"Our
argument is that China can play a constructive role in Africa as investors—but
they need to be responsible investors," said Mr. Hormats.
China
says it is simply doing business, largely to support an economy back home, and
engaging African governments. Beijing isn't promoting a particular development
model to counter a Western alternative, said Liu Guijin, China's special
representative on African affairs. "What we are doing is sharing our
experiences," he said in a May interview. "Believe me, China doesn't
want to export our ideology, our governance, our model. We don't regard it as a
mature model."
Many
African leaders feel otherwise.
Ethiopia,
which has received more than $4 billion in assistance from the U.S. government
since 2007, has praised China's growth and criticized Western
"band-aid" approaches to development. Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi has lashed out at "extremist neo-liberals" for criticizing his
tough stance on dissent, such as jailing journalists and lining the capital
with surveillance cameras, which were purchased from a Chinese security
company.
South
Africa has been sending top officials to Beijing's Communist Party School to
learn how to run state-owned companies more profitably. China is also helping
Algeria, Nigeria, Zambia and other African nations build special economic zones
to attract foreign investment—similar to the laboratories for industrial reform
that spurred its own opening to the world.
Chinese
textile makers, real-estate developers and restaurateurs have followed China's
state-owned firms onto the continent. That combination of state-driven
capitalism and entrepreneurial zeal has set an alluring example for many
African leaders seeking ways to generate investment in their emerging
economies.
"The
China model is appropriate because Africa needs investment," says Raman
Dhawan, managing director for Tata Africa, an Indian conglomerate with projects
dotted around the continent.
China
is now the continent's largest trading partner, edging out the U.S. Last year,
its trade with Africa reached $114 billion, up from $10 billion in 2000 and $1
billion in 1980, according to China's State Council, or cabinet.
On a
continental scale, China's deal-making pace far exceeds the U.S.'s, according
to Mthuli Ncube, Chief Economist at the African Development Bank Group. He
estimates Chinese firms accounted for 40% of the corporate contracts signed
last year, to 2% for U.S. firms.
Unlike
the U.S., which often sends aid money to non-governmental groups, China mostly
routes aid through government entities, usually in consultation with leaders
about what their priorities are.
In September
2010, China and Ghana signed infrastructure-related loans and other projects
valued at about $15 billion, just as the West African nation begins pumping
crude from a massive new oil field. In 2009, China signed a $6 billion loan
agreement with mineral-rich Congo for infrastructure projects. In Angola, a top
supplier of crude to China, Chinese banks have extended about $9 billion in
loans and other types of financing, according to a 2010 report from the African
Development Bank.
In
Addis Ababa, for example, Ethiopia, hundreds of Chinese and Ethiopians have
been building the headquarters to the 53 member states of the African Union.
China is footing the tab for the $200 million tower and conference center.
While
the building is a symbol of tightening ties with Africa, Chinese officials
aren't vying with the U.S. for influence, they say here. "It's not China
versus America. It's whatever helps the Ethiopians," says Zeng Huacheng,
who has been managing the project as a counselor at the Chinese embassy in Ethiopia.
"If we don't help, Africans will suffer."
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