China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is the most ambitious infrastructure project ever undertaken and will ultimately result in more than one trillion dollars of investment by the time it is finished. The Initiative is breathtaking in its scope and scale, with scores of countries participating and dozens of massive dams, railways, roads, and power projects transforming the landscape throughout the developing world. Only China is capable to undertaking such a bold Initiative. Beijing might have chosen to make unadulterated development as its core objective, issuing billions of dollars in grants to host governments to fund the projects and lending its substantial engineering and construction expertise to nations that desperately need to develop their infrastructure, seeking nothing in return. Instead, Beijing chose to lend the governments of these nations money it knew could not be repaid and use the BRI not only to project its soft and hard power and seek greater influence throughout the world, but to blatantly pursue the acquisition of natural resources.In the process, many BRI host nations have become indebted to Beijing, owing it tens of billions of dollars and falling into a debt trap. Beijing required that these governments agree to either cede control or outright ownership of these projects to the Chinese government, or its companies, when they inevitably defaulted. Some projects never stood a chance of operating profitably. Doing so has made these countries beholden to Beijing in a variety of ways.This book is an exploration of the profound impacts the BRI has had on nations around the world – both developing and developed – as well as on the Chinese government and its participating companies. Beijing failed to foresee the potential impacts of its approach on host nations – or perhaps it did not care. Now, there have been substantial negative reverberations, prompting Beijing to re-think it approach. Will Beijing approach the BRI differently in the future? Is it even capable of doing so?These are among the many questions addressed in this, Daniel Wagner’s third book on China. His first book on China – China Vision – delved into how Beijing is seeking create an alternative world order in China’s image. His second China book – The America-China Divide – analyzes the scope and scale of the fissure between the two countries, going well beyond the economic and political realms. In The Chinese Vortex, he takes a deep dive into the shockwaves that have been felt around the world as a result of the BRI, providing numerous examples that chronicle how damaging many of these projects have been to countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Daniel explores many of the economic, geopolitical, and environmental impacts, but also a host of additional topics that help the reader better understand what is really at stake. Among the many topics explored are how Beijing’s pursuit of a national digital currency may affect BRI nations and the world, why the BRI is losing its appeal, and what Beijing - and the world’s nations - must do to try to mitigate its negative impacts. It is an informative and eye-opening exposé that sheds light on Beijing’s brazen pursuit of influence, natural resources, and power through the BRI.
China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has been, surprisingly, scarcely covered by the American media, overlooked by trade deficits and now COVID. The infrastructure megaproject touches over 70 countries and will cost China well over $1 trillion. Spending has already reached $700 billion. Daniel Wagner, who has written books about China thrice over the past two years, has devoted a whole book to the topic called The Chinese Vortex: The Belt and Road Initiative and its Impact on the World.
From the outset, Wagner states that “The BRI is a grand scheme envisioned to project Beijing’s power and expand its global footprint and influence, while creating a foundation for development through the provision of infrastructure projects.” It’s a scattershot collection of infrastructure investments in countries around the world, most notably in Asia and Africa. Earmarked BRI funds, in the form of cross-border loans, are going towards everything from airports, power plants, rail projects, and seaports. Many countries that are normally excluded from access to such loans are able to finance projects, thanks to the BRI’s laissez-faire attitude towards applicants with poor governance or financial stability. Think of the BRI as the NINJA loan lender for developing nations.
Like many of the NINJA loans that failed (and led to the U.S. housing bubble), many BRI loans have been defaulted on by the governments that signed them. While a homeowner who defaults is forced to relinquish his or her house, nations who default on loans must surrender far more. For instance, Kenya lost its Mombasa port to China in 2018 and Sri Lanka lost its Hambantota port to China in 2017. Beijing has made countless other loans to countries who are barely able to keep up with their payments. Wagner notes that “Between 2013 and 2018, Zambia’s national debt tripled as a percentage of national income. Most of it was owed to China.”
Poor countries such as Zambia must resort to severe austerity or to canceling BRI projects pre-completion in order to avoid defaulting, though China has recently become more open to the idea of forgiving or restructuring a portion of some of these bad loans, due to the outcry from international organizations.
Wagner spends the first part of the book discussing the nature of China’s aforementioned BRI loans to countries in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, South America, and Europe, as well as China’s motives and the impacts of each kind of project (such as Kyrgyz citizens protesting the dumping of pollutants into bodies of water). Daniel Wagner then goes into the cyber aspect of China’s domestic and international development. The yuan will be the first major national currency to be mirrored with a cryptocurrency equivalent, the Digital Currency/Electronic Payment (DCEP). The DCEP’s ramifications on Chinese and international commerce and monetary policy are discussed at length. Staying along the cyber line, the book also explores the intersection of Chinese tech with state surveillance, which has received a lot of negative publicity recently.
Software, hardware, cloud computing, and AI are fast becoming the keys to economic supremacy. China has been aware of this since the 1980s and, as a result, has positioned itself at the forefront of tech innovation. A lot of these gains were fueled by state-corporate espionage. Tech companies that want to establish a base in China must give the government almost unlimited access to its secrets, like encryption keys and user data. This has allowed Chinese tech companies to make leaps and bounds, by enabling China to rip off foreign companies’ software and hardware blueprints.
In this same spirit, China is now falling under suspicion of wanting to export technology that can be used to spy on foreign citizens and companies. Sensitive products like satellites, phones, and telecom-lines are being shipped en masse to countries around the world though there has been some recent pushback amongst Western nations. Authoritarian governments, such as Saudi Arabia and Burma, are also clamoring to receive access to China’s infamous Great Firewall censorship and spying software, which can ironically also be used by China to spy on said authoritarian governments.
More favorable publicity has been garnered by China in terms of its environmental outreach, though Wagner points out that the BRI is quite mixed in terms of its green impact. As noted by the author, “The China Development Bank and China Export-Import Bank financed power plants in 38 countries between 2013 and 2019, nearly half of which were fossil fuel-based.” China particularly favors funding coal plants, which are inefficient to the point of being phased out in countries like the U.S.
The BRI has also been surprisingly sparse in terms of wind and solar power projects; rather it favors hydropower as the green energy source of choice. However, hydro dams are incredibly disruptive to both the local ecology and to local residents, who are often displaced in the tens or hundreds of thousands to make way for the dams. Several BRI dam projects in Southeast Asia have been canceled due to local outcry over these concerns. BRI projects may sometimes skip environmental impact reviews, in order to save time and money. Thus, projects are having all sorts of deleterious effects on local ecospheres.
The Chinese Vortex is a useful and succinct primer on the myriad global effects of the BRI – from diplomacy, to technology, to commerce. The chapter on China’s cryptocurrency is particularly groundbreaking, as most people aren’t even aware that it’s in the works. I wish that Wagner had talked more about the controversies surrounding Huawei and TikTok, as those two companies have some of the most tangible effects on the average Westerner. Huawei, as one the only 5G telecom contractor not named Ericsson or Nokia, can shape wireless communication for potentially billions of people for decades to come. TikTok has hundreds of millions of young people as active users. On the whole, this book will prove informative to those who read it.
A useful but very dry collection of statistics about the Belt and Road Initiative. It felt like an endless high level briefing. Also, I listened to this as an Audible book and although the reader has beautiful resonate voice, there were frequent slight pauses as if the reader had stopped recording in the middle of a sentence and then picked up again almost but not quite seamlessly.