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Belt, Road exporting China's know-how

Updated: Dec 28, 2018 Xinhua Print
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The China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative is bringing the Asian country's infrastructure capital and knowhow to developing countries involved in its expansion. [Photo/VCG]

NEW YORK - The China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative is bringing the Asian country's infrastructure capital and knowhow to developing countries involved in its expansion, a renowned US scholar said.

"China has shown itself to be a vivid example of the benefits that can flow from the active hand of government in investment in infrastructural development," Sourabh Gupta, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Institute for China-America Studies, said in a recent interview.

"As the Belt and Road Initiative is extended and expanded overseas, it will afford a similar foundation on which developing countries can jump-start their own development on lines achieved by China over the past three decades," he said.

Proposed by China in 2013, the BRI, which refers to the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, aims to build a trade and infrastructure network connecting Asia with Europe and Africa along the ancient trade routes of the Silk Road.

Development under the initiative's transnational framework involves a variety of countries, and China has the finance, skills and experience to make infrastructure growth a reality, Gupta said.

The key is early-stage investment in hard and soft infrastructure, he noted.

While trade liberalization and market forces are important for resource allocation and growth, inclusive industrialization-led development "cannot be left to market forces alone," he said.

"The active hand of government is required to overcome a host of deficiencies related to institutional shortcomings, rent-seeking, and a general lack of competition," he said.

It is also important to ensure that the infrastructural investments under the BRI banner are "well-designed and productivity-enhancing", given that these investments have long gestation periods, and the financing that is provided needs to be paid off from the productive assets created, said the expert.

"Creating long-term productive assets requires wise and patient capital - a difficult challenge, and this is the reason that there is such a vast global deficiency in infrastructure investment. So Chinese capital and know-how are very important to fill this gap," he said.

The world's infrastructure spending is insufficient. For example, $5.5 trillion is needed between now and 2035 to fill the gap in global infrastructure spending, according to the McKinsey Global Institute.

"But for the gap to be filled efficiently, it also requires that the feasibility of projects is conducted with great due diligence and does not add to the creation of unproductive assets that could saddle countries with excess debt," Gupta said.

"In this regard, it is important to stock-take the achievements and progress under the BRI, so that the initiative can be rolled out even more effectively."


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