Making Sense of China’s Development Finance and Aid
Chinese Development Finance in Africa
Author: Deborah Brautigam, American University
Chinese development finance in Africa is unusual in that much of the financial flows from China do not constitute official development aid (ODA).
Instead, much of it comes in the form of export credits and strategic lines of credit to Chinese-related companies, among other mechanisms. In this sense, it is very similar to Japanese financial flows to China several decades ago, when Japan began its outward march with a large line of credit to China, which, at the time, was not credit-worthy either. Looking at the nature of Chinese development aid — and non-aid — to Africa provides insights into China’s strategic approach to outward investment and economic diplomacy, even if exact figures and strategies are not easily ascertained.
Chinese development finance in Africa involves two distinct types of financial flow: ODA and ‘other official flows’ (OOF). ODA as defined by the OECD refers to concessionary funding given to developing countries and multilateral institutions primarily for the purpose of promoting welfare and economic development in the recipient country. Funding must be ‘concessional in character’ (i.e. involving government subsidies) and loans must have a grant element of at least 25 per cent, using a 10 per cent discount rate.
While only concessional loans and grants qualify as ODA, governments also offer other official flows: funds for the donor country’s firms to subsidise or guarantee their private investment in recipient countries, military aid and export credits. These funds are reported as OOF. This category includes loans that are not concessionary in character, and official bilateral transactions — whatever their grant element — that are primarily export-facilitating in purpose.
For Africa, the OOF category provided by OECD members has normally been well below the level of funds provided on ODA terms. But this is not the case for China. China’s government-provided finance to Africa falls primarily into the OOF category, rather than ODA. As noted above, China’s official finance in Africa consists of grants, zero-interest loans, debt relief and concessional loans (which would all qualify as ODA), as well as preferential export credits, market-rate export buyers’ credits and commercial loans from Chinese banks (none of which would qualify as ODA).
In Africa, as elsewhere, Chinese aid agreements seem to follow diplomatic ties. China’s ODA does not appear to be given in larger amounts to resource-rich countries, as can be seen in flows to Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Grants and zero-interest loans are distributed fairly evenly around the continent, while concessional loans fit a country’s ability to pay, either because it is middle income or because it will finance an income-generating project.
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daftmongrel said:
go china!!
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