In The Specter of Global China, Hong Kong sociologist Ching Kwan Lee argues Chinese foreign investment and presence on the African continent is largely misunderstood and misrepresented. Rather than looking at all Chinese money that is floating around through infrastructure projects, development loans and businesses, lumping it together as a single organized entity and extended arm of the CCP, Ching makes the case that we should differentiate between private and state capital. While Chinese state capital, defined mainly as directly controlled SOEs and government to government loans, does seem to follow certain strategic aims at the continent (although those are not always strictly adhered to due to local forces that require adaptation from the Chinese side), private capital on the other hand should not be clumped together since it often has no bearing whatsoever on attaining such goals.
Based on several years of field research in the Zambian mining and construction industries, Ching argues the currently widespread tales regarding China's influence (and accusations of neo-imperialism) on the African continent fail to take into account that the receiving side, the African countries and communities receiving an influx of Chinese money, is a lot more powerful than often acknowledged. Chinese policymakers have to continuously adjust and react to these local conditions, making the 'scramble' for resources not as straightforward and smooth as often depicted. Moreover, state capital actors are often much more heterogeneous than is usually represented, including competition between Chinese ministries for power because of conflicting goals.
Ching is convincing in outlining the complexity of Chinese capital and the danger of simplifying numbers in order to make broader arguments regarding China's reach on the global stage. However, she fails to justify how the ethnographic case study of China in Zambia could truly be extrapolated to the entire continent. If anything, the book at times is more of an ethnographic case study of Zambian society itself, detracting attention away from the overarching topic of 'Global China' in Africa. While a solid read for anyone interested in learning more about Zambia, it doesn't live up to its promise of tackling the broader topic of 'Politics, Labor, and Foreign Investment in Africa'.