Belt and Road Initiative explained:

How China is looking beyond borders

By GRAPHICS STAFF APRIL 26, 2019

The “Belt and Road Initiative” was announced by the Chinese government in 2013 as a global trade strategy based on the ancient Silk Road trading route.

It aims to develop a new Silk Road economic belt and 21st century maritime Silk Road by promoting economic cooperation across Asia, Africa and Europe. The initiative combines new and older projects and includes improved soft and hard infrastructure, and even cultural ties.

MEASURING SENTIMENT
China is providing massive financing to participating countries, which currently officially number 66, for the development of infrastructure. Many of the recipients are developing countries which see China’s plan as an opportunity to boost their local economies. There is no firm evidence to date of how successful these projects have been in fulfilling the expectations of participating belt and road countries, but there are concerns that some projects lack regulation and coordination with existing markets. Critics of the belt and road scheme believe it represents a risk for participating countries that they will be left with unprofitable, unnecessary infrastructure. One of the biggest global concerns is that developing countries will be left with a debt burden to China which they will be unable to meet.

The Brussels-based think tank Bruegel set out to gauge perception of the belt and road scheme among participating and non-participating countries. Using the Global Database of Events, Language and Tone, Bruegel conducted an analysis of broadcast, online and printed news from 132 countries between May 1, 2017 and April 25, 2018. Generally, the study found the belt and road scheme to be well perceived, with no significant gap between those countries participating and those which do not. Bruegel also used its dataset of media articles to identify the topics most frequently associated with the belt and road scheme, as well as how discussion of them affects perceptions of the scheme in different countries.

“Trade” and “investment” were the two key topics identified and it appears from Bruegel’s analysis that frequent use of “trade” in media coverage in relation to the belt and road scheme leads to more negative perceptions. Reaction to “investment” as a belt and road topic was less clear, as Bruegel found it statistically irrelevant in countries’ perceptions of the belt and road plan.

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METHODOLOGY
The tone of media coverage about the belt and road scheme in specific articles published in a country was calculated and the result was then aggregated with the average sentiment at country level, to build a scale, from the highest positive sentiment, 4.98 points (Botswana) to the lowest -2.8 (the Maldives).

Also included in this visual analysis is an index of Operational Risk, developed by The Economist, which uses 10 criteria to quantify the risk to business profitability, based on present conditions and expectations for the median term.

Among the criteria are: security, political stability, government effectiveness, foreign trade, the legal and regulatory environment, measured by a score from 0 to 100. Combined, the measurements of sentiment and operational risk in each country help to provide an understanding of the current scenario for the belt and road programme.

SELECT ONE OPTION BELOW TO SEE COUNTRIES

Americas
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Middle East and North Africa

Sub-Saharan Africa
Asia and Pacific

DEBT SUSTAINABILITY
Under the belt and road programme China provides loans to participating countries to develop their infrastructure. In a developing economy, infrastructure is the main engine and guarantee of growth but, when a country incurs too much debt without sufficient economic growth, the impact can be negative on people and the economy, as domestic spending on welfare and social services may be sacrificed to service the debt.

According to a report from the Centre for Global Development, these are the 20 belt and road countries most vulnerable to debt distress:

GEO-ECONOMIC VIEWS FROM OTHER NATIONS
The great powers each have very different geo-commercial strategies, but all are characterised by an ambition to develop economic expansion plans which include neighbouring countries and, in many cases, other parts of the world. Initiatives include large communication infrastructure projects, diplomacy and closer economic ties and cooperation.

Let's take a look at these initiatives that focus on Asia as an important part of their geo-economic vision.

EUROPE
The European Union, with its highly developed infrastructure, is seeking to expand and develop links through a number of initiatives. The Trans-European Transport Network consists of nine corridors across its expanse, with more than half focused on expanding its connections to Asia. Likewise, the European Union has several agreements, most notably the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership and the Eastern Partnership, aimed at extending relations beyond its borders. The EU-China Connectivity Platform Short-Term Action Plan strengthens cooperation between China's belt and road scheme and the EU's Trans-European Transport Network's policy, promoting the development of structures for a relevant corridor between all regions along the route.

RUSSIA
Russia leads the Eurasian Economic Union, integrated together with Kazakhstan, Belarus and Armenia, and is considering strengthening this group through economic and diplomatic ties with the belt and road plan. Its geo-economic goals include expanding its natural gas pipelines to China.

ASEAN
The 10 countries that make up this geo-economic group propose, with their Master Plan on Asean Connectivity 2025, to develop key infrastructure, including the improvement of ports to strengthen the Maritime Economic Corridor, highways to connect the great sub-region of the Mekong, and a railway project between Singapore and the Chinese city of Kunming.

INDIA
Right now India is more focused on the development of infrastructure within its own territory. It is part of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, which includes Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. The political tensions in recent months with Pakistan and the current uncertainty in this month's elections mean agreements within this association are on hold. India is also interested in improving its access to Western Europe through the port of Chabahar in Iran, as well as developing maritime corridors with Myanmar and Thailand.

JAPAN
Japan already has strong ties with Western nations and is now striving to develop and explore new maritime and terrestrial corridors to allow it to interact economically with Southeast Asian countries. Japan has also strengthened diplomatic ties with the countries of Central Asia.

IRAN
The Islamic Republic seeks to become a bridge between East and West, although economic sanctions imposed by the US have been a drag on their projects. Iran is part of the Ashgabat Agreement, a multimodal transport pact between Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Pakistan, India and Oman to facilitate the transport of goods between Central Asia and the Persian Gulf.

SOUTH KOREA
Like Japan, the South Korean government aims to strengthen relations with the Asean member countries through its New Southern Policy, which also includes cooperation with its northern neighbours and the northeastern region of China. Projects include the development of port infrastructure, railways, natural gas pipelines and electricity grids.

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