Thursday, 23 July 2020

China’s Belt and Road Awakens With a Push Through Pakistan

China’s Belt and Road Awakens With a Push Through Pakistan
By  Faseeh Mangi        21 July 2020

When China’s President Xi Jinping announced its ambitious Belt and Road Initiative in 2013, Pakistan was one of the first to welcome it with open arms. The two have gotten together again to revive the project from hibernation.
The countries that share a 273-mileborder have gotten together three times since June to sign new projects worth about $ 11 billion. That takes commitments of projects in Pakistan to more than $70 billion. The biggest splash has been mainly power plants that has ended Pakistan’s decade-old problem of electricity shortage.

Two of the new projects are hydro-power generation in Kashmir, a nexus of tension between Pakistan and India since the split in 1947. China has slowly added tension in the region by quietly financing projects and gaining influence all around India from Sri Lanka to Pakistan. It escalated recently with India and Chinese soldiers in a nine-week border standoff that resulted in deaths on both sides. India went on to ban Chinese apps including TikTok in India.

China has certainly had some successes with Belt and Road. The World Bank estimates about $575 billion worth of energy plants, railways, roads, ports and other projects have been built or are in the works across the globe. More recently, though, its progress has slowed. Many countries have had a rethink and coronavirus complicated its future.
China’s Belt and Road
Myanmar scaled back a port deal, while Malaysia with a new government  renegotiated a rail project last year. Pakistan did the same with its railway effort signed last month. The most expensive project to date that will revamp a British-era railway system has seen its cost drop by a billion dollars to $7.2 billion.
So what has triggered the flurry of deals in Pakistan? There’s a new officer in town.
Former Lieutenant General Asim Saleem Bajwa was appointed last year to run the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor Authority and then made part of Pakistan’s cabinet a few months ago. Bajwa became one of the many former and current military officials appointed in prominent government roles to get projects going, and he’s given projects with China fresh momentum.
China’s advances are setbacks for U.S. economic and political influence in the region. Washington has led a global campaign against Belt and Road, arguing that China’s reliance on loans locked poorer countries in “debt traps” while advancing its own strategic aims.
Faseeh Mangi in Karachi 

Ports and exports data are brightening Bloomberg’s Trade Tracker, matching more upbeat sentiment about a global recovery. Ports in Singapore, Los Angeles and Hong Kong all showed improvement in June, lending some credence to purchasing managers who have been registering less dour sentiment readings.
Today’s Must Reads
·       Soft pallet | A shortage of wooden pallets is threatening to derail Britain’s trade with the European Union after Brexit. Meanwhile, Boris Johnson faces a rebellion from members of his own party seeking to give Parliament a veto on new trade deals.

·       Delivering a cure | When it comes to protecting the world from the coronavirus, two doses of a vaccine may be better than one. But doubling the shots each person needs could complicate efforts to immunize billions of people.

·       Tesla supplier | Deep in the electric-vehicle industry’s supply chain is a little-known Japanese manufacturer that makes a seemingly mundane, but essential, device: coil-winding machines.

·       Core supplier | Apple will soon invite a mainland Chinese company into the exclusive club of global iPhone assemblers, marking the biggest change to a decade-old production model just as Washington-Beijing tensions escalate.

·       Tough time | The Swiss watch industry faces a 30% drop in exports this year as the coronavirus pandemic slashes international travel and key markets outside China still grapple with the outbreak.

·       Getting in shape | An HSBC survey showed the changes companies plan to make to strengthen supply chains don’t suggest a big retrenchment from their overall strategy of international commerce, amounting to reshaping rather than reshoring supplier networks.

·       Flying low | Shipments of diesel and jet fuel from East Asia to Europe are set to stay low for a while yet, potentially aiding hard-pressed European refiners.
Save the Date
relates to China’s Belt and Road Awakens With a Push Through Pakistan
As the global economy begins to reopen, how can companies rethink how they produce their own products, from supply chains to adopting new technologies? On July 29, join Bloomberg Live for Powering Product Innovation in a Post-Pandemic World and hear from business leaders including Ellen J. Kullman, president & CEO of Carbon, and Thomas Ingenlath, chief design officer for Volvo Car Group, as they explain how they have pivoted and positioned themselves to respond to today's critical needs. Click here to register.
On the Bloomberg Terminal
·       Beauty business | Global beauty, home and personal-care makers have varied supply-chain challenges, though most have managed well against economic, political and terrorist disruptions, Bloomberg Intelligence writes.

·       Trade slowdown | The volume of goods arriving at U.S. ports in the four weeks through July 2 is down 9% from January levels, IHS data available on the terminal show.











No comments:

Post a Comment