By Mihir Sharma
YOU MAY not have noticed, what with the outbreak of trade war with the US and all, but China鈥檚 economic diplomacy has had a bad few weeks. The country鈥檚 flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is dealing with ever-greater resistance, slowing a momentum that once seemed unstoppable. In fact, I鈥檇 argue that the BRI is stalled.
The clearest sign of this, perhaps, was the news that Malaysia had halted Chinese projects worth $22 billion, including a controversial rail link along the country鈥檚 east coast. The decision looked inevitable after May鈥檚 elections. One of the pillars of Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad鈥檚 successful campaign to unseat Najib Razak was the charge that Najib鈥檚 close links to China had bred corruption and bad decisions. Mahathir鈥檚 associates linked the scandal at the 1MDB development fund to BRI financing, while Najib鈥檚 associates doubled down, putting Chinese President Xi Jinping on their party posters. One Malaysian politician complained visitors might鈥檝e thought Xi himself was on the ballot.
In many ways, China鈥檚 stumbles in Malaysia are exactly what BRI skeptics had always warned would happen in countries across Asia. Projects that might be easy to execute in China would run into delays and cost overruns in less-regimented countries; growth in debt, deficits and Chinese immigration would spark political opposition; and, when a new political leadership canceled those projects, bilateral and multilateral tensions would spike.
Malaysia is only the most high-profile example. To the north, Myanmar鈥檚 Planning and Finance Minister Soe Win told Nikkei this week that his government would demand that a new port on the Bay of Bengal be 鈥渟limmed down.鈥
For China, the port is pivotal — the shortest way to get oil from the Indian Ocean to southern China, avoiding a strategic chokepoint at the Straits of Malacca. But Myanmar now owes 40% of its external debt to China, which, as Soe Win pointed out with gentle understatement, is 鈥渘ot recommendable.鈥
Myanmar鈥檚 leaders can hardly be blamed for scaling back, especially given 鈥渓essons learned from our neighboring countries,鈥 as Soe Win put it.
In Sri Lanka, an overindulgence in Chinese finance has already pushed one government out the door and left its successor saddled with expensive white elephants.
Great Wall China
Interest payments on Chinese loans — about $11 billion a year — would鈥檝e consumed almost all of the island nation鈥檚 tax revenue. (Chinese infrastructure finance doesn鈥檛 come cheap — Sri Lanka reportedly pays six percent.) That prompted the new government to grant a Chinese company a controlling share of the big, empty port at Hambantota in a debt-for-equity deal, and panicked India enough to explore buying the world鈥檚 emptiest airport 20 kilometers away — also Chinese-financed, naturally — just to ensure it stays out of Chinese hands. Negotiators began talks this week on a price.
Even in Pakistan, which had embraced the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) as an effective antidote to dependence on an increasingly unfriendly West, policy makers are having second thoughts. Expensive Chinese machinery imports have pushed the current account deficit — and the rupee — to the wall. Pakistan鈥檚 central bank only has enough reserves to cover a couple of months of imports — and that鈥檚 after the country borrowed nearly $4 billion from the Chinese last year.
Pakistani officials have reportedly warned the Chinese that they鈥檇 better keep lending or Pakistan would turn to the International Monetary Fund, and then 鈥渨e would have to make full disclosure of the terms on which China has agreed to build the CPEC.鈥
Pakistan鈥檚 voters, going to the polls shortly, should perhaps be asking themselves why a full disclosure of these terms would be so embarrassing. China鈥檚 leaders will shortly learn a lesson the US learned ages ago: Pakistan is the only country in the world that negotiates with a gun to its own head. My guess is that China will pay up this time, but that won鈥檛 make the CPEC any more sustainable financially.
And while all this was happening, China鈥檚 Premier Li Keqiang was in Sofia meeting with the leaders of Central and Eastern Europe for the annual 鈥16+1鈥 forum — a meeting notably lacking in enthusiasm compared to previous such conclaves. The European leaders will have noted that big infrastructure investment hasn鈥檛 exactly been turning up on time from China — and, for that matter, where it has, as in Athens鈥 Piraeus port, it may also have opened the door to criminality and fraud.
When the Belt and Road was first announced, it must have felt like a gift from heaven for embattled governments trying to raise money for the infrastructure their voters wanted. But, the truth is that China鈥檚 cash came with onerous conditions — high interest rates, procurement guarantees for Chinese companies, imported workers. Nor was China really prepared for the hurdles faced by big-ticket investments in countries with messy, more accountable politics.
Can the initiative be salvaged? Perhaps. After all, China has a capital surplus that needs to go somewhere. But, if it wants its investments to be sustainable, China will have to behave in these countries a lot more like the Western capital it seeks to displace. That means being cautious, cooperative with local capital and civil society, and respectful of political sentiment, even from dissidents.
In other words, the Chinese state would have to behave like the private sector. And we know how tough an ask that is.
 
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