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Chinese-African summit: The allure of the Chinese model of Development

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Construction workers sit under a billboard promoting the upcoming China-Africa summit in Beijing.
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Published by bana2166- 11-01-06
news Chinese-African summit: The allure of the Chinese model of Development

Chinese-African summit: The allure of the Chinese model of Development
Wei-Wei Zhang
International Herald Tribune
Many of the African leaders coming here for the Chinese-African summit meeting are attracted not only by opportunities for aid and trade, but also by the Chinese model of development.
They know that only three decades ago, China was as poor as Malawi. But while the latter remains among the world's poorest, China's economy has expanded nine-fold. Indeed, the Chinese model has in many ways challenged the conventional wisdom in the West on how to fight poverty and ensure good governance. Its key features are:
People matter. Since 1978, China has pursued a down-to-earth strategy for modernization, and has focused on meeting the most pressing needs of the people. The architect of China's reform, Deng Xiaoping, argued that China could only "seek truth from facts," not from dogmas, and all reforms must take account of local conditions and deliver tangible benefits.
Constant experimentation. All changes in China first go through a process of trial and error on a small scale, and only when they are shown to work are they are applied elsewhere.
Gradual reform, not big bang. China rejected "shock therapy" and worked through the existing, imperfect institutions while gradually reforming them and reorienting them to serve modernization.
A developmental state. China's change has been led by a strong and pro-development state that is capable of shaping national consensus on modernization and ensuring overall political and macroeconomic stability in which to pursue wide-ranging domestic reforms.
Selective learning. China has retained its long tradition of "selective cultural borrowing" - including from the neoliberal American model, and especially its emphasis on the role of the market, entrepreneurship, globalization and international trade. It is inaccurate to describe the Chinese model as the "Beijing consensus" versus the "Washington consensus." What makes the Chinese experience unique is that Beijing has safeguarded its own policy space as to when, where and how to adopt foreign ideas.
Correct sequencing and priorities. China's post- 1978 change has had a clear pattern: easy reforms first, difficult ones second; rural reforms first, urban ones second; changes in coastal areas first, inland second; economic reforms first, political ones second. The advantage is that the experiences gained in the first stage create conditions for the next stage.
Over the past 25 years, I've traveled to more than 100 countries, most of them developing countries, including 18 in Africa. I have concluded that in terms of eradicating poverty and helping the poor and the marginalized, the Chinese model, however imperfect, has worked far more effectively than what can be called the American model, as represented by the IMF-designed Structural Adjustment Program (SAP) for sub-Saharan Africa and the "shock therapy" for Russia.
The American model is largely ideology driven, with a focus on mass democratization. With little regard to local conditions, it treats sub-Saharan Africa or other less developed countries as mature societies in which Western institutions will automatically take root. It imposed liberalization before safety nets were set up; privatization before regulatory frameworks were put in place, and democratization before a culture of political tolerance and rule of law was established. The end result has often been discouraging or even devastating.
The paramount task for most developing countries is how to eradicate poverty, a root cause of conflicts and various forms of extremism. What they usually need is not a liberal democratic government, but a good government capable of fighting poverty and delivering basic services and basic security.
Furthermore, conditions for a liberal democratic government - rule of law, a sizable middle class, a well-educated population, a culture of political tolerance - are simply absent in most poor countries. Enforcing premature democratization on them often leads to what Fareed Zakaria has called "illiberal democracies," or worse, ethnic and sectarian conflicts.
So long as the American model remains unable to deliver the desired outcome, as shown so clearly in failures from Haiti to the Philippines to Iraq, the Chinese model will become more appealing to the world's poor.
I well remember Deng telling the visiting president of Ghana, Jerry Rawlings, in September 1985: "Please don't copy our model. If there is any experience on our part, it is to formulate policies in light of one's own national conditions."
Perhaps attitude makes all the difference. China is viewed by others as modest, America as arrogant; China leads by example, America by lectures and sanctions, if not missiles.
At the end of the day, what matters most is finding the best ways to tackle the many challenges facing mankind. The Chinese model, however imperfect, has enriched the world's political discourse and wisdom and hence expanded the policy options.
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By bana2166 on 11-01-06, 10:43 PM
news Beijing Hosts Big Africa Summit as West Watches

Beijing Hosts Big Africa Summit as West Watches
Shai Oster
The Wall Street Journal, 25 October 2006
BEIJING -- China will strike a number of agreements on trade, investment, aid and debt forgiveness when it hosts the heads of 48 African countries next month in what is being billed as the biggest summit China has held in modern history, according to the Chinese official heading the effort.
"The main objective of this summit is to establish a new type of partnership between China and African countries against changing circumstances," Assistant Foreign Minister Zhai Jun said yesterday in an interview.
The gathering in Beijing, dubbed the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, is set for Nov. 3 to 5. It comes as many African leaders seek help to repair their strife-torn countries and China looks for new resources to meet its growing energy needs, as well as new markets for its own emerging domestic companies. It caps growing ties between the two regions over the past several years that have sparked some ire in the West.
Mr. Zhai defended China's human-rights record in Africa and said China isn't interested merely in striking sweetheart deals to tap into Africa's deep oil reserves. Rather, he said, China is eager to raise living standards in the world's poorest continent, and feels it can share lessons and opportunities from its own development.
"Africa is rich in resources and has a big market. We are pursuing our relations by seeking mutual benefits, in an open and transparent manner. China has nothing to hide," Mr. Zhai said.
Last year, China imported 38.4 million tons of oil from Africa, or about 771,000 barrels a day. Mr. Zhai pointed out that is less than one-third of the amount some big Western nations receive from Africa. The U.S., for example, imports about 2.4 million barrels a day from Africa, more than it gets from the Middle East.
Western oil companies fear their Chinese competitors are able to use government backing for aid deals and loans to secure preferential treatment. China says that in terms of business, its deals are purely commercial and transparent. So far, China's companies have a much smaller presence than other international players, but they are looking to expand to feed China's fast-growing needs for fuel.
Mr. Zhai said there would be further cooperation on energy. "For many African countries, energy is a pillar industry. Many nations want to transform their oil into a strength through our cooperation. We are helping them meet such a goal," Mr. Zhai said.
Agreements in several key areas are expected to be announced by China's President Hu Jintao and signed during the meeting. To encourage more imports from Africa, an expansion of the number of African goods that would be subject to zero-percent tariffs in China is likely to be included in the pacts. Currently, some 190 goods, from 28 African countries, are exempt from tariffs. There will also be pledges for more aid, including training in everything from medicine to agriculture, and investment in Africa. Mr. Zhai said the government is actively encouraging Chinese companies to expand their business in Africa.
While he didn't disclose how much in loans African countries owe China, he said China would announce another round of debt cancellation. He said China's loans were a small proportion of the $284 billion in debt Africa owes globally. China has already forgiven some $10 billion of debt in yuan-denominated loans, mostly from infrastructure projects, he said.
Last year, the Paris Club of big Western lenders forgave roughly $50 billion of African debt. Some critics are worried that China is giving fresh loans to regimes that still don't have the ability to spend the money responsibly or fight corruption, and that such waste will only send those nations back into a cycle of carrying loans they can't pay off. Increasingly, Western nations are seeking to tie aid with specific guarantees from governments on fiscal and social policy -- a policy China rejects.
"We don't want the development models, ideologies and values of other countries foisted on our country," Mr. Zhai said. "Likewise we don't impose our development mode, ideology and values on other countries -- not least on African countries. So, it has been the consistent position of the Chinese government when conducting aid with African countries that we do not attach conditions."
The summit marks 50 years since China first established diplomatic ties with Egypt, the first African nation to reject the island of Taiwan's claim as the sovereign over mainland China, then a deeply ideological, but poor, Communist state. China aggressively wooed African states with help and aid to convince them to switch sides.
Now, only five African countries, including Swaziland and Malawi, recognize Taiwan. Meanwhile, China has emerged as one of the biggest economies in the world with its own brand of capitalist authoritarianism that has transformed the relationship with Africa from a largely political one into a mostly commercial one.
Beijing will pull out all the stops to impress the delegations with its rapid economic growth, arranging trips to the Great Wall, and showing off the signs of its modern wealth, such as the commercial capital Shanghai. It will coordinate some 1,500 delegates and another 1,030 journalists from Africa, China and elsewhere. "Perhaps they will bring some lessons home when they have seen the changes that have taken place in China," Mr. Zhai said.
This comes as some in the U.S. and elsewhere are casting an increasingly wary eye at China's growing involvement in Africa, most recently in Sudan, where China has large oil interests. Mr. Zhai rejected allegations that China isn't doing enough to stem the violence in Darfur. "I believe the Darfur issue and China's economic and energy cooperation and trade are two separate issues. It is not the case that because of the good relationship and cooperation with the Sudanese government that we're turning a blind eye to the situation in Darfur."
He criticized U.S. policy. "The United States has unilateral sanctions -- has it been useful?" he asked.
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