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Over a barrel: China’s oil diplomacy in Africa. UC-Santa Cruz Winter 2008 Global Issues Colloquium Oil, Africa and the Global War on Terror. Giles Mohan Open University. Spot the difference?. Mid-1970s. 2006. ‘Ideology’ versus ‘business’. When business is political.
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Over a barrel:China’s oil diplomacy in Africa UC-Santa Cruz Winter 2008 Global Issues Colloquium Oil, Africa and the Global War on Terror Giles Mohan Open University
Spot the difference? Mid-1970s 2006
When business is political "With this in mind, I find that my conscience will not allow me to continue with business as usual“ (February 2008)
Key arguments • We need to situate China-Africa relations in terms of the global economy and not overplay China’s role. • We need to go beyond simplistic either/or arguments or those which demonise China. • China’s interests in Africa are not new and its current focus on resources is not dissimilar from other industrializing countries down the years. • That said while Chinese ‘aid’ is used to further both economic and geopolitical claims it has been different
China’s foreign policy: ‘flexible’, ‘harmonious’ and ‘peaceful’ • Foreign policy is flexible, differentiated and proactive • Post-Mao focus on modernisation of PRC economy, access to foreign markets, capital & technology • Post-Tiananmen re-evaluation of foreign policy, focus on access to energy resources and efforts to counter US hegemony • Resource diplomacy, ‘soft power’ & support for China in multilateral agencies
China’s diplomatic offensive • A permanent Forum on China-Africa Co-operation (FOCAC) • 2004-7, President Hu Jintao has visited Africa three times, dispensing billions of dollars of debt relief (US$80m in Sudan alone) • China plans to open five trade and economic co-operation zones in Africa by 2009 • A US$5 billion China-Africa Development Fund was launched in 2006 • In 2006 China published the equivalent of a White paper entitled China’s Africa strategy
China’s 2006 Africa Strategy “Enhancing solidarity & cooperation with African countries has always been an important component of China's independent foreign policy of peace. China will unswervingly carry forward the tradition of China-Africa friendship, and, proceeding from the fundamental interests of both the Chinese & African peoples, establish & develop a new type of strategic partnership with Africa, featuring political equality & mutual trust, economic win-win cooperation & cultural exchange” (2006, China’s Africa Strategy)
‘Aid’ delivery • Traditionally unclear what China thinks of as ‘aid’ • Aid often tied to other forms of assistance & economic co-operation • China avoids the status of ‘donor’ & the word ‘aid’ is often avoided • The volume of Chinese aid regarded as a state secret • High levels of poverty within China makes aid a sensitive issue but not one widely debated
China: the anti-imperialist “If one day China should change her colour and turn into a superpower, if she too should play the tyrant in the world, and everywhere subject others to her bullying, aggression and exploitation, the people of the world should identify her as social-imperialism, expose it, oppose it and work together with the Chinese people to overthrow it” (Deng Xiaoping Speech at special session of the UN General Assembly, 1974).
Down with America, down with Soviet Union • Cold war context, ideology & geopolitics, confrontation with the U.S (1950s/60s) & U.S.S.R (1960s/70s) • Afro-Asian solidarity based on shared history, common enemies, and ‘revolution’ • Countering international recognition of Taiwan • Aid programmes aimed to ‘show up the North’ (Snow, 1995) • Missionary like convictions of being morally ‘right’
Tensions “Among ordinary people, a very strong resentment, bordering on racism, is emerging against the Chinese...It’s because the Chinese are seen as backing the [African] governments in oppressing their own people” (Melber 2007) The everyday The organised
China: the excuse? • Chinese oil interests relatively small • China’s largesse understandable given state of world oil markets • China’s stance on governance is changing
The China hawks: Rogue aid and the dictator dividend “development assistance that is non-democratic in origin and nontransparent in practice. Its effect is typically to stifle real progress while hurting average citizens…threat to healthy, sustainable development…effectively pricing responsible and well meaning organizations out of the market in the very places they are needed most” (Naim, 2007)
Not quite panda huggers, but… • Dialogue to bring China in to the donor ‘fold’ • “it is in Africa where we would like to work more closely with China…To achieve lasting poverty reduction in Africa donor and recipient governments must work together to make the most effective use of aid.” (Benn 2004) • Use existing initiatives
Conclusion • Greater Chinese involvement in capacity building and governance • Blurred lines of Chinese influence • Tentative multilateralism • The ‘revival of triangulation’ • China’s own ‘development’, China as net debtor
More of the same? • Will China’s engagement with Africa radically alter Africa’s ‘extraverted’ relationship to the global economy? • Or does China simply offer a different version of neoliberalism?