International media have reported up a storm on the recent surge in China-Africa links. They invoke a theme familiar from the past two centuries of colonialism and Cold War: Africa is beset by poverty and ignorance, caused by ruthless and corrupt rulers. Westerners are trying to bring them to book and instill order on the continent, but other forces, in this case Chinese interlopers, are making that difficult.
The facts on the ground show China’s engagement in Africa has been more positive than this discourse claims. The Chinese are getting bad press in the West because they are from a country that is neither liberal democratic nor white, yet are effectively competing with those who are – to the point that some Africans see Chinese development activities as providing a model.
The Chinese, it is said, are in Africa only for natural resources, to feed China’s industry and huge population. To exploit the continent, they provide loans and aid to rogue regimes.
They worsen the plight of Africans by dumping cheap, shoddy products in their markets and ruin local industry. Chinese investors pay Africans a pittance, in contrast to more ethical Western firms. Given all that, China can only be an obstacle to Africa’s development.
It’s an exciting tale but, alas, the media have gotten it all wrong. It’s not mainly China that impairs Africa’s development, but a world system of neo-liberal capitalism, based on privatization, trade liberalization, and reduced social spending, into which China is now partly integrated. As part of the same world system, China and the West have many activities in common in Africa, but there are also some distinctly Chinese trade and investment practices and these are often more appealing to Africans.
China-Africa trade was $3 billion in 1995, but $107 billion in 2008. That’s still only 4 percent of China’s world trade. Yet, it makes China Africa’s second largest trading partner and trade is balanced in Africa’s favor. On imports from Africa, the China-in-Africa media discourse focuses overwhelmingly on oil. It’s often alleged that Chinese demand for oil perpetuates Africa’s reliance on petroleum exports, preventing growth of more labor intensive industries, such as agro-business and manufacturing.
Most of what China buys from Africa is indeed oil (62 percent) and ores and metals (17 percent), but in 2008 oil was 88 percent of US imports from Africa and minerals made up most of the rest. China’s investment in oil production in Africa equals only 8 percent of that of Western multi-nationals and 3 percent of all investment in African oil. China received 9 percent of Africa’s oil exports, but Europe and the US each took 33 percent.
China also couples oil acquisition with low or no interest loans to build the infrastructure Africa needs, at a much lower cost than the West is willing to do. For 2006-2013, China lent or will lend $28 billion to Africa for infrastructure and as trade credit. There is also less scope for corruption with China’s loans for infrastructure projects – often built by Chinese firms paid directly by China’s government – than with the all-purpose aid Western sources provide African governments, such as the money for primary education in Uganda in the 1990s, four-fifths of which never reached the designated schools .
The focus of the China-in-Africa discourse on China’s exports is almost wholly on basic consumer items and their alleged negative consequences. Chinese goods are held responsible for the decline in Africa’s textile and clothing (T&C) industry. But when Chinese goods first came in mass around 2000, Africa’s T&C was already decimated by the international financial institutions’ forced trade liberalization of the 1980s and 1990s, which opened the market to second-hand and new clothing from developed countries. The fact is that Chinese goods are much cheaper than imports from other countries, as well as locally made goods that are made costly by poor infrastructure, pricey utilities, and corruption. A British government study found that Chinese exports to Africa mainly displace developed country exports.
China’s stock of investments in Africa rose from $49 million in 1990 to $7.8 billion in 2008. The total stock of FDI in Africa in 2007 was $36 billion, with most of it from the EU, US and South Africa. There are about a thousand significant Chinese enterprises in Africa, but the media discourse focuses only on investment in extractive industries, particularly on one investment, the Non-Ferrous Metals Corporation Africa (NFCA) Chambishi copper mine in Zambia.
Conditions at the Chambishi mine, with its 2,200 employees, have indeed been deplorable. Chambishi, however, is not the only Zambian mine where conditions are highly oppressive, as the many strikes at Western and white South African mines show. Zambians regard all the mines as much worse now than they were before privatization, at World Bank insistence, in the late 1990s. In any case, Chambishi mine is not the largest Chinese-owned enterprise in Africa. In Nigeria, a Chinese conglomerate employs 20,000, including many local managers, yet the media dwells on Chambishi.
A comparison of Chinese and Western firms in Africa would find that many on both sides have oppressive conditions, but Western firms garner much higher profits. In contrast to Western investments, many Chinese enterprises are equity joint ventures, sharing profits with Africans. Most produce for the local market and focus more on infrastructure and manufacturing than do Western companies.
China is presented in the discourse as “indifferent to Africa’s authoritarian despots, as it courts the continent for energy and minerals,” as a leading British journalist put it. But the US and France support most despots in Africa, providing them with military assistance and legitimacy. The West is also implicated in the trade in money and trade in people. Some 40 percent of Africa’s private wealth has been sent overseas (Martin Meredith, “The Fate of Africa: a Survey of Fifty Years of Independence,” Washington Post, Jan 20, 2006), much of it to banks that trade interest and secrecy for these funds. London and Zurich, not Beijing, receive these fruits of capital flight and tax evasion. Western states trade their citizenship for the skills of hundreds of thousands of African professionals, especially doctors and nurses who have trained in, but are now lost to Africa. China has trained tens of thousands of Africans to be doctors, engineers, agricultural specialists and they generally return to Africa (“China has Education Cooperation with 50 Countries,” Business Daily Update, Nov 28, 2005).
The China-in-Africa discourse lacks a comparative approach and reflects Western elites’ perception of their national interests and moral superiority. Its proponents fail to question Western government rhetoric about “aiding African development” and “promoting African democracy.” At the same time, they seize on any example of supposed exploitation by Chinese in Africa.
Many Africans – and some Westerners – question the binary view of a new Western “civilizing mission” versus the actions of “amoral” Chinese who don’t fully practice neo-liberalism by, for example, conditioning loans to African states on reduced spending on social services. They are increasingly rejecting a discourse that draws attention away from Africa’s systemic problems of exploitation and human rights and toward blaming Chinese, not for what they actually do in Africa, but for being the newly perceived strategic competitor of the West.
Barry Sautman is a political scientist and lawyer at the Hong Kong University of Science & Technology who works on ethnic politics in China and China-Africa relations. Yan Hairong is an anthropologist at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University and the author of New Masters, New Servants: Migration, Development and Women Workers in China (Duke University Press, 2008). The article first appeared in Yale Global online on Feb 10, 2010.
[China Daily 02/24/2010 page9]
By Barry Sautman and Yan Hairong (China Daily)
If i may ask these hired guns, which imperial power that has scrambled for Africa or any third world country has had its role right???? Look every where beyond Africa from the orients, creleos the Mancuans, the role of imperial powers has never been right.What brought up the Opium war, the proxy wars of the East-West conflict, Korean war, Vietnum, the Folkland, Shaah revolution, the civil wars in Sierra Leone, Great Lake, Liberia, Ivory Coast and Mozambique without ignoring Zimbabwe?
A good piece. I don’t support either models. Africa will one day have its laugh. We can develop our continent if those in the diaspora came back or we wait for all these freedom fights who have no economic proweress but onl an apepetite to remain in power doing nothing. A crop of economic managers will take over africa one day and that will be the begining. It is an evolutionary process but i hope we have some resources remaining then. Mangande and HH would have done better in zambia and General Miyanda is capable of protecting national integrity. Whoever wins in zambia in 2011 among the competing parties will not do nothing substantial for zambia. Sata and Rupiah are freedom fighters who should have left the political platform to HH and Mangande. For now we are stuck with freedom fighter
I meant “we wait for all these freedom fighters who have no economic proweress but onl an apepetite to remain in power doing nothing to die”
Ubuntu,
When and where did Sata become a freedom fighter in the history of this country???? In the colonial era he opposed the liberation struggle during Chachacha. Sata viciously opposed any African Government in preference for his erstwhile Masters misrule. Brutally as a police of bamwisa he oppressed and served as voice of colonialism. When UNIP succeded, he ran away with bamwisa to London for a Kaboyi job cooking and washing for them. In 2001 he orchestrated and viciously sold the unconstitutional third term. So what freedom fighting are you talking about that is lacking public record or accomplices? May be you men his struggle with polygamy?
Well Observed my brother/Sister.
My point is sata lived in the colonial days and so he is like all freedom fightres who did a commendable job. Put this in the picture of China-africa story. Africa will not be developed by external initiatives or help no matter how noble. We need the new generation with a new economic mindset who will not not everyone with new initiatives. Freedom fighters see any new initiative as an enemy. They are insecure to new ways and are happy when people dance for them and upset when critical ideas are offered. I don’t attack people’s personal lives however despicable but will not vote for them even those with known cocumbines. Sata’s generation should be in retirement telling folklore at fireplaces or at independence day about colonialism to their…
If you are stupid as usual, the chinese will win instead of making it a win win situation. The chinese model suits afric best because it rose from the ashes just like africa is in now. I would rather the chinese model and approach with caution. If GRZ is stupid we will end up with no minerals and only shopping malls left for future generations
All you need is a govt in Zambia that manages all foreign investment in the interest of Zambians. the Chinese did not invade us. If we didnt want them, they would not be in Zambia. Period. To blame the Chinese is to look for scape goats. We and our govt should blame ourselves for allowing this situation.
Why is Liberty Times posting propaganda from China Daily? Didn’t you know that they are a state-owned newspaper? They do not care about the truth. Language and logic are weapons in the propaganda war. I would not recirculate this stuff. You do your readers a disservice by presenting deceitful and specious argumentation funded by an autocratic regime that is expert at propaganda, without any independent or truth-seeking analysis. I knew something was wrong a quarter of the way through, then I skipped to the end and saw the source. This is bad news, plain and simple.
Why is Lusaka Times posting propaganda from China Daily? Didn’t you know that they are a state-owned newspaper? They do not care about the truth. Language and logic are weapons in the propaganda war. I would not recirculate this stuff. You do your readers a disservice by presenting deceitful and specious argumentation funded by an autocratic regime that is expert at propaganda, without any independent or truth-seeking analysis. I knew something was wrong a quarter of the way through, then I skipped to the end and saw the source. This is bad news, plain and simple.