Its a pretty dicey situation. Pakistan needs something to believe in. China needs to keep the long term strategy alive and hedge on all the options (there are chances the CPEC will be financially viable... who knows for sure). China has gambled a lot more (100's of billions of dollars) on parts of its own internal economy...so 46 billion (mostly loan) with a nonzero annuity return rate and more importantly the positive propaganda (its how the Chinese really succeed in large parts of the developing world) is really a piece of cake for them since externalisation of their buffer margins actually is more profitable for them (theoretically speaking) given the overinvestment climate in China right now.
I don't envy the pakistani taxpayer at all, given that he/she is a rare breed to begin with.
Im sure China will be open to renegotiating the interest rates...most probably by extending the timeframe and mitigating the yearly rates. A lot depends on what China's own financial situation is at that point. I don't think its easy to project that at this point in time.
JICA can do what it does because of a few fundamental reasons which I will cover in that thread (of the analysis someone did) I'll tag you there.
But what matters more than paying back the loan is the actual transfer efficiency to the Pakistani economy (since that in itself will be the main conduit to paying back the loan...i.e how much of the loan "catches" efficiently". Building a capacity is one thing, utilising and exploiting it efficiently is another thing.
I mean one can effectively put a bench/squat machine in the basement and load it with massive weights. Being able to bench and squat those weights and grow long term muscle is another thing all together. Was that investment worth it, or was your body better served at this point in time by sticking to lighter dumbells and doing more cardio/diet planning first. Thats the basic crux of the issue in my opinion.
What exactly has Pakistan guaranteed? If its set in stone and the Chinese mean to enforce it long term, that definitely does spell doom like you say.
If its more pliable (or ends up having to be for both sides sake), then there may be more respite for its long term viability (and it will have to be really long term).
As it stands and assuming 100% enforcement of such terms, it does not bode well for Pakistan.
Well such projects should ramp up organically (if FDI). I have not seen that happen (its pretty flat). But people have been posting pictures of the work going on, so that means it must be through a loan instrument of some kind thus far (and thats what will probably continue). I was talking about it with
@Sky lord on a thread. FDI is much more preferable because the source internalises the risk (and is thus incentivised to make the long term returns/financials work).