Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,176,734 members, 7,898,580 topics. Date: Tuesday, 23 July 2024 at 03:11 PM

Panic: Africa Western Tastes Incurred Odious Loans Now Chinese Loans - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Panic: Africa Western Tastes Incurred Odious Loans Now Chinese Loans (297 Views)

Onochie’s Attacks On Igbo Monarchs Sacrilegious, Odious, Says Ohanaeze / Chinese Loans: How FG Signed Empty Loan Repayment Documents – Reps / How Oshiomhole Incurred Tinubu’s Wrath Over Ajimobi’s Nomination (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

Panic: Africa Western Tastes Incurred Odious Loans Now Chinese Loans by googi: 11:26am On Sep 10, 2018
Panic: Africa Western Tastes Incurred Odious Loans Now Chinese Loans

Chinese companies will takeover Zambia’s power utility ZESCO and the Airport. Your country is next! Once upon a time, an African country used to lend or grant money to some African and Caribbean countries to pay their workers’ salaries. It is now ancient history. Today many African countries including the giant of Africa, cannot fund their budgets without loans from (IMF) International Monetary Fund of the western countries and lately from the Chinese banks.

Whether Chinese loan or western loan is cheaper or more favorable has become an academic exercise. There has to be takers for any loan before a competitor can beat the interest rate in order to attract the takers. The debate about which loan is cheaper or more favorable should be reserved for weaklings that are producers of nothing and consumers of everything outside their capabilities.


The only countries that live on deficit are those printing colored papers not backed by gold, natural resources or material goods; whose prices they can dictate by fiat. If anyone wants to swindle you, they take tangibles from you in return for intangibles. Even then, intangibles can be hyped euphoria like drugs, lottery, infatuation, 419 or illusions. As long as there are sellers and buyers, contract bogus or not, can take care of disputes. It up to whose court of law?

https://www.thenigerianvoice.com/news/270370/panic-africa-western-tastes-incurred-odious-loans-now-chine.html#

Another good example is the armed race. Poor countries buy arms from powerful countries to destroy or protect themselves at such an exorbitant price, they never have enough finished resources, goods and services to pay off the sellers. Indeed, arms are good source of income for rich countries. When powerful countries sell arms to one another, they buy to dismantle and study them so that they can produce their own.

This is why sellers put limitation on the versions they sell or restrict the type they sell. The price of most of the arms sold to poor countries can take up most of their budgets pushing them into loans from the sellers of deficit financing. This is why they create conflicts within regions and sell to both warring factions. It is a win-win situation for the arms sellers and lose-lose “bargain” for buyers.

More important are the conditions for the loans that can vary from perpetual deficit or outright seizure of the project like the infrastructure the loans are used for. This is what is going on in Zambia. Both are more or less the same. If they do not take over the projects, they may dictate the rent, tolls or bigger share of the returns on each project.

In short, whatever a country takes a loan for; it never belongs to the people again. Since these loans are structured intentionally, never to be paid back in full prompting defaults. If paid pack as in Nigeria’s Paris debt, it’s in interest on interest resulting in multiples of what the initial principal was.

If you have a choice between odious loans from the western world paying for those western taste addictions or to Chinese softer loans buying up Africa, which would you prefer? Some claim that the only way out, is to play along if you want to get along and sign unto their loans for “progress”. You may be indebted to them for life, it all boils down to what you are getting back. Another form of slavery in paradise!

It has been argued that if African did not take these odious loans to pay for our acquired tastes, religions and cultures we would still be stuck in the 19 century. While we have definitely acquired material wealth in the mirror image of our “liberators”, we have also plunged ourselves into financial and cultural debts that we have no way of getting out of. If anything, our self-worth has depreciated into inferiority status. Are we better off today than we were in the days of our derailed Great Empires?

When western countries warn Africans about Chinese loans and its consequences of being indebted to China for life, we must ask why coal is calling kettle black. Each of these western countries now see a threat to their domination of African tastes, culture and religion heavily paid for with our natural and human resources. All they had to do is give us more loans to pay for their food, gadgets, weapons, machineries and their “technical” expertise.

The Chinese, looking for the same privileges in Africa are willing to do whatever Africans want at a cheaper rate than the western countries. Finally, the competition is on and the western countries are worried to death that Africa may slip away from their sphere of influence. Mind you, it is not that the Chinese are giving Africans anything for free. But their terms and conditions only appear more favorable than those of the West.

Indeed, the Chinese are better than the Russia. Most of the projects started by Russians are either in decline or incomplete like the Ajaokuta Steel in Nigeria or poorly constructed and not functional. We must remember that the Chinese had an early presence in Africa during the construction of many railways across Africa. These were durable and if they fell into disrepair, Africans should be blamed for lack of maintenance. The relationship is different today.

Recently, people cried out that the local rice is more expensive than foreign rice. Producers are giving the same excuses bread makers, local auto assemblers and others were making to make more profit in Nigeria, shooting themselves in the foot; while they sell the same cement, oil and gas cheaper in neighboring countries.

This is how we killed our textile and palm oil industries for imports from Asian countries bought with odious loans.
Source: Farouk Martins Aresa
Published: Monday, September 10, 2018
Re: Panic: Africa Western Tastes Incurred Odious Loans Now Chinese Loans by nobaga: 3:03pm On Sep 10, 2018
Short term exotic material wealth for a few right now, perpetual slavery for gullible majority that have their support.

Which is worse, poverty or ignorace?

.
It has been argued that if African did not take these odious loans to pay for our acquired tastes, religions and cultures we would still be stuck in the 19 century. While we have definitely acquired material wealth in the mirror image of our “liberators”, we have also plunged ourselves into financial and cultural debts that we have no way of getting out of. If anything, our self-worth has depreciated into inferiority status. Are we better off today than we were in the days of our derailed Great Empires?
Re: Panic: Africa Western Tastes Incurred Odious Loans Now Chinese Loans by nobaga: 9:00pm On Sep 10, 2018
RIGHT OF REPLY


Why no need to worry about debt sustainability and Chinese loan to Africa?
1
2018-08-27 13:40:20CGTN Editor : Gu Liping ECNS App Download

Editor's note: Cheng Cheng is an associate research fellow with the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Renmin University of China. Yang Xi is a junior student at George Washington University, DC, US. The article reflects the authors' opinions and not necessarily the views of CGTN.

Economists commonly agree that infrastructure and the manufacturing industry constitute the two most needed economic drivers for the growth of African economies. Contributing to these two sectors, China has provided great financial support.

Since 2011, China has invested an average of 12 billion US dollars annually in African infrastructure and constructed more than 5,000 km of both railway and roads respectively since 2000.

Although, most of the international organizations, including the World Bank and IMF, have credited China as the largest investment contributor and the biggest constructor for Africa, Western media and some government officials have misleadingly distorted China's loans to Africa as so-called "debt traps" or "neocolonialism."

After studying these specific finance for nearly a decade, I feel obliged to share five facts about debt sustainability and the case of Chinese loans to Africa, especially under the circumstance of welcoming 53 national leaders from Africa to Beijing next week for the FOCAC Summit.

1. Yes, the debt ratio of Sub Saharan African (SSA) is climbing up, but it is still under control.

According to United Nation Economic and Social Council report (released on Apr 27, 2018), the average debt to GDP ratio in African countries is 32 percent, and for some oil exporters, the ratio exceeds 40 percent.

Comparing to debt ratios of developed and emerging countries, which could be as high as 70 to 80 percent, Africa's debt problems worth a lot of attention but not panic.

Besides, Africa's public debt has been a longstanding issue. Although Western donors have made great effort to lower debts of Africa since the 1980s, the accumulated debt ratio is still the outcome of receiving Western loans for the previous decades, including Official Development Assistance (ODA) and loans from private banks. Some economists believe that ODA loans can be linked to the Latin American and African debt crises in the 1980s and 1990s.

2. The Debt Sustainability Framework of the IMF is prudent but not productive.

The Debt Sustainability Framework of the IMF set very rigid debt standard for the African countries, the 25 percent public debt ratio is prudent financially, but I doubt any low-income country could raise enough funds for public expenditure following the Framework.

The problem is that the purpose of setting these standards should be to ensure sustainable growth not securing the debts owed by the donors. Dynamic debt sustainability should be applied to calculate a project's feasibility and return rate, not a rigid standard over one economy not caring for the nature of the projects.

Over the decades after the 1950s, Western countries have developed a set of mechanisms, such as the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries and Multilateral Debt Reduction Initiative, to deal with the debt issue in developing countries.

Behind them, the international organizations like the IMF, OECD Development Assistance Committee and the informal institution like the Paris Club make core decisions, with no saying from the developing world at all.

Through these mechanisms, Western countries could control the debt levels in African countries and even dictates their development choices. The regime then got a name known as “Donors Cartel” for its grasp over the power to deal with debts in Global South.

Basically, without the "signing-off" on debt cap, no African country could ever borrow one dollar from any Western donor, even their private banks.

3. China has been trying everything it could to increase the debt tolerance and repayment capability of African countries.

Until the end of 2010, China has issued over 23.8 billion yuan worth of debts reliefs for the 44 most under-developed countries. Chinese President Xi Jinping announced during UN Assembly in 2015 that China will also write off the intergovernmental interest-free loans due by the end of 2015 for LDCs, landlocked developing nations and small island developing countries, including African countries.

From its domestic experience, China believes that the solvency of debt problem lays fundamentally over the growth of the economy, especially over the increase of exportation.

China-Africa cooperation, which mostly involves infrastructure and industrial collaboration, offers Africa unprecedented development opportunities to join the international production chain as a value-added segment, as we have witnessed in Ethiopia and Rwanda.

Also, China-Africa cooperation supports the transportation and energy infrastructure coverage in this region. The upgrading trend is likely to continue.

4. Chinese loans are concessional in nature.

The majority of the loans facilitated by the Chinese government are highly concessional with a fixed interest rate below three percent, a maturity period as long as 15 to 20 years, and a five to eight years grace period.

Considering most of the African borrowers do not enjoy a high international credit status, which means their borrowing rate is very high in the global capital market, the terms of Chinese loans are highly concessional. Not only the quality but also the quantity of Chinese loans matter.

After the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in 2010, the credit limit of official Chinese loans surged. It exceeded 10 billion US dollars in 2010 and reached 17 billion US dollars in 2013, then slipped a little as the economy slowed down in Africa.

5. If debt crises shall fester in Africa, the US, instead of China, should take the blame.

Most loans to Africa, from China or not, are dollar-denominated. Since late 2017, the US Federal Reserve Board's rate hikes and the strong US dollar have driven up the borrowing costs, weaken other currency and caused huge capital flight from developing countries.

All these piles up the global financial risks and making debts owed by African countries no longer sustainable. As people are witnessing, it is the Fed's practice that is damaging macroeconomic stability in the region and denting China-Africa cooperation.

The accumulating risks following the highest ever US dollar index may damage both African economies, and Chinese investment may also suffer losses. The coming FOCAC, as a key multilateral platform of Africa, will have to seek a mechanism to coordinate the debt issue.

It is suggested that parties can hold regular meetings to share debt-related information. Chinese and international organizations can jointly provide technical support and training for the finance departments of African countries, helping them to establish effective debt management practices. This way, China-African cooperation will continue to stride on the road of sustainable development.

http://www.ecns.cn/news/politics/2018-08-27/detail-ifyxikfc9643661.shtml

(1) (Reply)

Femi Otedola Yet To React To News Of Him Running For Governor Of Lagos State / ”no Plans To Impeach Ambode”- Lagos State House Of Assembly Speaker Says / No Rift Between Tinubu And I - Ambode

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 42
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.