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Practical Cooperation Will Create a Better China-Africa Future

(People's Daily Online)  Sissy Zhang  2016-02-02 00:46


Rong Yansong Economic and Commercial Counsellor of Chinese Embassy in South Africa


By Rong Yansong,
Economic and Commercial Counsellor of Chinese Embassy in South Africa

This year marks the fifteenth anniversary of the establishment of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC). The Johannesburg Summit of FOCAC was just held successfully last week from December 3 to 5 with the theme “China-Africa Progressing Together: Win-Win Cooperation for Common Development”.  

The most prominent characteristics of China-Africa cooperation under the frame of FOCAC is practicability. Since the FOCAC was established in 2000, the economic and trade cooperation between China and African countries has made remarkable achievements.  A series of significant economic and trade measures have been formulated and implemented to strengthen and deepen practical cooperation between the two sides at each conference.

From the year of 2000 to the Fifth Ministerial Conference of FOCAC, China has implemented 35 economic and trade initiatives, provided loans amount to US$ 35 billion, and supported the construction of more than 400 projects and 20 economic trade and cooperative zones in African Continent. China also has offered Africa more than 55,000 government scholarships. China has also provided financing support for many projects with a view to bridging the funding gaps in Africa’s development. For instance, China built Africa’s first modern railroad in Nigeria and Africa’s first modern urban light rail in Ethiopia. China has also confronted Ebola epidemic together with African friends and constructed the Kaleta Hydropower Station in Guinea.

These economic and trade measures have played an important role in promoting Sino-African trade and economic cooperation and helping African countries develop faster and making their people live better. China has joined Africa’s effort in creating jobs, generating tax revenue and improving their own capacity to develop. In the past three years, Chinese enterprises has paid over US$ 2 billion of tax to the host nations and hired nearly 600,000 employees in Africa. The Sino-African trade and economic cooperation also had been lifted to another new stage through the active implementation of these measures. In 2013, China-Africa trade exceeded for the first time the US$ 200 billion mark. In 2014, it reached USD 222 billion, up by 11.8% over the year of 2012. Over the past three years, China’s cumulative direct investment flows to Africa hit a record high of nearly US$ 10 billion. Meanwhile, the cooperation has been expanding into new areas and adopting new innovations in cooperation models.

In order to push China-Africa economic and trade relationship to a new era, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced ten new cooperation plans between China and Africa over the next three years. They include Industrialization Plan, Agriculture Modernization Plan, Infrastructure Plan, Financial Plan, Green Development Plan, Trade and Investment Facilitation Plan, Poverty Reduction Plan, Public Health Plan, Cultural and People-People Exchange Plan, Peace and Security Plan. Most of these plans are relative to economic and trade areas.

To make the ten cooperation plans be implemented smoothly, China also announced the financial support of US$ 60 billion, which include four parts. Firstly, grant and interest-free loans amount to US$ 5 billion, mainly to help African countries reduce poverty, improve sanitary conditions, develop agriculture and protect environment. The main purpose is to improve the well-being of ordinary people. Secondly, concessional loan and export credit with an amount of US$ 35 billion will focus on supporting major projects to improve the infrastructure in Africa. Thirdly, US$ 10 billion will be added to China-Africa Development Fund and the Special Loan for the Development of African SMEs with each one increasing by US$ 5 billion. It will back up China-Africa cooperation in industrialization, investment and trade. Fourthly, the newly established China-Africa Fund for Production Capacity Cooperation has an initial contribution of US$ 10 billion.

Compared to the economic and trade supporting plans, new initiatives have its own characteristics: matching the development strategic of both sides better, covering broader areas and including more content of innovation, such as fighting climate change, protecting wild animals and plants, sustainable development and among others.

As the largest developing country and the largest developing continent, China and Africa have achieved hard-won fruits in their cooperation. The cooperation between China and Africa is expected to promote their respective economic development and benefit Chinese and African people. We have recognized that currently China-Africa cooperation met some challenges like weak global demand, slowdown in international trade and plunging commodity prices. Although both of us have felt noticeable external pressure in our economic development and mutual commercial cooperation, in Chinese culture, there are always opportunities linking to headwinds. The Johannesburg summit has extended valuable opportunities for China-Africa economic and trade cooperation. So long as China and Africa support each other and move forward together, we will undoubtedly overcome any difficulty, further enhance practical cooperation and create a splendid future.