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China Is Using Loans to Spread Its Control

<p>Although China had been largely isolationist in past decades&comma; it is now secretly spreading its influence through loans to developing nations&period; The loans are being made to some of these nations in amounts that cannot be easily repaid by those governments – and then the collateral is taken in terms of resources or land when they cannot be repaid&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The loans are seen as being burdensome to small nations especially when they are being hit by the coronavirus&period; This virus has impacted the stock markets of the world and greatly reduced trade and the ability of any nation to repay these loans&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Recent investigations into the lending practices of China in this century have discovered that China has been making many hidden loans&period; These loans are not being revealed to the International Monetary Fund &lpar;IMF&rpar; or the World Bank&period; Only deep research has discovered them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Oftentimes&comma; these loans have been for very large sums – amounts that are much larger than the country could ever repay&period; More than 50 countries have borrowed from China&period; Initially&comma; the amounts were for about one percent of the countries’ GDP on average as recently as 2015&comma; but they now are for about 15 percent in 2017&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Countries that are becoming more developed are also developing a higher percentage of debt to China&period; China has been slowly growing its income from its lending practices&period; In the year 2000&comma; it was estimated that China was owed &dollar;500 billion from other nations&period; In 2017&comma; however&comma; the amount owed had skyrocketed to above &dollar;5 trillion&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When offering these loans&comma; China does not give the countries discount rates&period; They often present them at market rates and collateral is required&period; In some cases&comma; when the country could not pay&comma; land or resources were grabbed for payment&period; Sri Lanka&comma; for instance&comma; had to give China control of the Hambantota Port that was strategically located&period; Pakistan had to get another loan from the IMF in 2018 to pay its debt to China&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While China has restructured some of its loans&comma; it certainly has not always been the case&period; Sometimes&comma; they offer expensive projects to a country that cannot afford it&comma; and then they claim the project as collateral&period; Loans from Western countries have often been made to help make loan payments to China&period; When building these large projects&comma; China often brings in its own companies and workers – so the money is not going to help the country much&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>These loans have been hidden from open sources&period; Deep research has revealed them&period; When the loans are made&comma; the countries are often forced to agree to non-disclosure&period; This means that when those nations ask for loans from other sources&comma; that they cannot reveal that they have already borrowed money from China and cannot reveal how much&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is estimated that as much as a quarter of all lending to developing nations comes from China&period; Most of the money is believed to come from just two banks&colon; the Export-Import Bank of China and the China Development Bank&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>China&&num;8217&semi;s expansion into these markets appears to be partly because of its Belt and Road Initiative created in 2013&period; Its goal is to recreate a new Silk Road&comma; which involved an open trade route between the West and the East&period; They want unimpeded trade through both land and sea routes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The plan includes the development of an infrastructure utilizing ports&comma; airports&comma; railways&comma; and roads&comma; and having power plants and communications networks through it&period; Altogether&comma; this ambitious plan involves about 70 countries – about 65 percent of the population of the world&comma; and about a third of the world&&num;8217&semi;s GDP&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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