FREEPIK

MONEY doesn鈥檛 just make returns. It builds alliances, too.

That was the thinking behind the Marshall Plan, the US aid package intended to restart shattered European economies in the aftermath of World War II. 鈥淚f Europe fails to recover, the peoples of these countries might be driven to the philosophy of despair,鈥 and return to totalitarianism, in proposing the program.

The political effect of turning the continent鈥檚 war-ravaged economies into a prosperous, integrated group of US allies is hard to deny. Rich countries need to contemplate that as they raise barriers ever higher against Chinese clean technology. If Beijing is serious about building mutual alliances abroad, it will do everything it can to use its industrial and financial power to emulate Marshall鈥檚 example.

As in postwar Europe, much of the world right now is struggling to recover from crisis. Lower-income countries whose budgets were shattered by the COVID-19 pandemic have struggled to roll over their debts thanks to deteriorating government balance sheets. Emerging middle powers such as Egypt, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, heavily dependent on imported liquefied natural gas, have faced further problems as Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine pushed prices out of their reach.

Meanwhile China 鈥 like the postwar US 鈥 emerged from the global crisis looking stronger than ever, with its economy about a third larger in real terms in 2023 than in 2019. Its current account surplus peaked at $460 billion in the third quarter of 2022, meaning foreign countries are sending more money for its goods and services than it鈥檚 sending back in return.

To balance out this surplus, Beijing has to invest more overseas 鈥 traditionally, by buying US Treasury bonds. Recently, however, the mix has shifted toward direct ownership of businesses. Over the past few years, outflows of foreign direct investment, or FDI, have been running ahead of inflows for the first time since the mid-2010s, when President Xi Jinping鈥檚 Belt and Road infrastructure program was in its first flush, and acquisitive conglomerates such as HNA Group Co. and Dalian Wanda Group went on a shopping spree for prestige assets.

The trend is only accelerating. Outbound FDI rose 19% in the first four months of 2024 relative to its level a year earlier, to more than 343 billion yuan ($47 billion), the Ministry of Commerce .

With developed democracies casting a skeptical eye over Chinese businesses, more and more of this money is flowing into emerging economies. Europe and the US accounted for just of Chinese FDI in electric vehicle manufacturing last year, according to Rhodium Group, a consultancy. Far larger shares went to Asia, Latin America, and North Africa, with Morocco alone receiving $6.3 billion.

EV manufacturers have been working on building new car plants in and , where State Power Investment Co. is adding to the it has operating.

All this spending represents a dramatic change for a country that was once the destination of others鈥 inward investment. China 鈥渁ppears to be undergoing a significant shift, from capital importer to capital exporter,鈥 FDI Intelligence .

There are many reasons to welcome such a shift.

China has built a clean-technology manufacturing sector that can go a long way toward getting the world to net-zero emissions. However, the two largest export markets, the US and Europe, are shunning this technology with tariffs and investigations into solar and wind exports and internet-connected cars. Poorer nations could provide an export market for the solar panels, rechargeable batteries, and EVs that rich countries appear to no longer want.

That鈥檚 not just a benefit to China. Developing countries need energy and capital to get richer, something China鈥檚 growth miracle amply demonstrates. By turning its current account surplus into investments in renewable power projects and EV plants, China can provide the fuel for other countries鈥 journeys to riches.

There are more strategic reasons for Beijing to favor such a policy. FDI is a potent form of soft power that often goes hand-in-hand with political hegemony. Just as a previous generation of foreign policy experts hoped that FDI in China would sway it toward a more democratic path, so Beijing may hope to build alliances with emerging economies through spending.

That鈥檚 going to be particularly important as China鈥檚 own growing wealth makes it look less and less like would-be allies in the Global South. The country may be just months away from joining the ranks of high-income nations, and meanwhile accounts for more than 40% of the world鈥檚 emissions.

If Beijing wants to maintain its diplomatic standing with low- and middle-income countries and not look like another heedless rich polluter, it will need to do everything it can to borrow from the altruistic legacy of the Marshall Plan.

BLOOMBERG OPINION