China Doing Business With Africa
China Doing Business With Africa A new dynamism in Africa has emerged, according to the China-Africa Dialogue – a think tank and conference held at the Beijing Capital Club last Friday. Speakers including Phillip Karp and Kevin Lu of the World Bank, Professor Xue Lan, Dean at Tsinghua University, Adam Mahamat of Africa Access, and the China Africa Business Council together with representatives of the Chartered Bank were all in attendance to provide insight, observations and debate on China's presence in Africa and what it means to the development of bilateral trade and the future for the African continent. Of Chinese total trade in Africa, China invested some US$5.1 billion in 2009 – smaller than the amount of trade conducted with South Korea for example, but still the same as the OECD combined. Of China's total foreign investment, Africa still only counted for just 5 percent of its total global expenditure. This amount included representation from some 1,600 Chinese companies – although the vast majority of these were state-owned enterprises. China has also provided a further combined US$10 billion in trade and business loans to African countries, of which 10 percent has been specifically earmarked for the development of SMEs. China's success in Africa, it was noted, is due to a combination of factors: the expertise in developing infrastructure, an absence of conditionality, and the permitted use of Chinese labor, which tends to be better organized and more efficient than African counterparts. On the negative side is China's apparent support for oppressive regimes, a lack of transparency, and a lack of environmental considerations. It was noted that many Africans are growing in disillusionment with Chinese investment, the apparent taking of minerals and other raw commodities without any concern for African labor or the environmental impact. On the other hand, China is providing an inspiration to Africa's developing infrastructure and is passing on development knowledge. Projects are also being completed in a fast timeline, although it was acknowledged at the conference that much is still needed to be done to truly unite African nations. Of all regions in the world, Africa possesses the highest number of inland countries, and road and rail infrastructure between them is remarkably poor. Opening up Africa's interior to trade and investment is going to be a major and long term struggle. China's relationships with Africa tend to be on a bilateral nation by nation basis, and this needs to change in order to promote better and more coordinated projects, particularly in infrastructure. A greater need to train, integrate and develop local labor and management is also needed. What is interesting to note is the development of sub-Saharan Africa and China – whose GDP growth the past 10 years have been closely aligned. Suggestions were made during Friday's dialogue that this also signified a de-coupling of Africa from Europe and a reemergence of Africa coupled with Asia. Both China and especially India have long term relationships right across Africa, and these are now dominant. "China and India are leading the long term growth in Africa" was the panel's conclusion. Finally, left with just one question to ask – "Where in Africa are the business opportunities?" – Lagos, Nigeria was mentioned as a developing financial and commercial center to rival that of South Africa. The panel acknowledged that South Africa needs regional competition to maintain its edge, while for East Africa and a base for China-India trade, Nairobi, Kenya was mentioned as increasingly viable, especially in the services industry. Finally, when it comes to my own firm, I may add that I've spent some time over the past two years researching opportunities in the services industry in Africa, especially from our perspective in professional services. As our firm has gone westwards and is now in India, it is of importance to note that Nairobi is just a six hour flight from Mumbai. That is less than the flight from Harbin to Sanya in China. The aspects of trade that we need to see as a practice to justify a presence in a region are there in Africa, although it is crucial to determine the differences between nations. Kenya offers a long sea coast, a long history of shipping and trade with Asia, and more recently, a developing legal and business model based on the old British colonial system that is standing up to the tests of time and fair play and trade. Nairobi is also the center for the UNDP, with its massive reach and influence, especially throughout Africa, which would provide immediate access to a solid intellectual base. These, coupled with growing Chinese and Indian bilateral trade and investment as well as a developing set of FDI legal and tax regulations, may well provide us with the ingredients my firm needs to make a considered foothold into the African market. The concept of "Going West" from India and China from now may well refer to Africa in the foreseeable future rather than Europe or the United States.
Questions and Answers
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With its trade reforms and its accession to WTO in 2001, China has adopted a new vision in doing business with the world. In order to expand its trade and find new markets for its manufactured goods, China has become an important partner for Africa. This has led to new business relations between Africa and China. Although the trading relationships are developing, there is an aspect that we should take into account: culture difference.
The negative perspectives of Africa captured on most international media are not matched by the reality on the ground. This may well contribute to creating opportunities for international investors, in frontier African markets, not afraid to seek high returns in a relatively high risk environment.
While South Africa's traditional trading partners the European Union and the United States are having a hard time dealing with the aftermath of the Global Financial
Aside from China, there are also other countries making investments in Africa. The "Sleeping Giant" is being noted in so many business magazines, by many business experts because of what it gained from the black continent. China is the newest talk of the town, not only that it gets juice from the world's second largest continent, also, it brings aid to the region's dying situation.
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The key reason why some firms thrive while some implode during an financial recession is still a puzzle to many people business-owning business owners. Some wrongly assume that all businesses should suffer via recessionary cycles. But the truth is that some companies are usually essentially recession-proof, and it is not necessarily because they are much larger, better known, or a lot more generously capitalized.
Companies like Arch Coal (ACI) and Massey Energy (MEE) watched his or her stock climbed.
With about 50 percent of our firm's China clients originating in the United States, we pay a great deal of attention to the politics, trends and sensitivities of the U.S. market. That they can often be described as "changeable" when it comes to China is an understatement.
Recent reports in the press over ethnic tensions "in Mongolia" demonstrate there is still much to be understood about the region. Apparently, an ethnic Mongolian herder was killed by a Han Chinese lorry driver in an accident that has sparked unrest in the Chinese autonomous region of Inner Mongolia. Meanwhile, Mongolia itself remains an independent country and is utterly unaffected by the incident in China.
In another reminder of China's "market access with socialist characteristics," the country's National Reform and Development Commission on Friday levied a RMB2 million (US$307,000) fine on Unilever for publicizing planned price increases.
The trend of the Chinese government to be involved in the nation's primary businesses can be illustrated in a number of items recently highlighted in data released by the British Foreign Office (BFO). In a presentation made recently to the European Chamber, a total of 40 of the 46 Chinese companies listed in the Fortune 500 were identified as state-owned enterprises. Of the remaining six, three were Hong Kong businesses.
China is slowing however, and possibly faster than people generally recognize. I've been skeptical of some of the GDP growth figures anyway, and I'm also concerned about the amount of bank debt in the system, I think China will struggle to have its fiscal stimulus incentive returned.

