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AIIB (Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank) news


The last few days, the headlines say, "China welcomes country-a, country-b, etc...... to AIIB".

China is putting up the money and is calling all the shots. Thank goodness for that! Otherwise, it would just be like another IMF/WB.

China should up the loan capital to $500 billion and rename it the WIIB (World Infrastructure Investment Bank). This will make it bigger than the World Bank and ADB combined. Now, that's something to crow about.

If these countries qualify, China should extend the invite to Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Surinam, French Guiana and Nicaragua. (Venezuela and the rest may not qualify).

Also, extend the invite to African friends, and there are many who qualify to join the AIIB/WIIB.

I read that South Africa is applying to come on board. China should just put the BRICS bank on the back-burner as the other four BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China are already in the AIIB).

Hong Kong is already in. Taiwan is interested. But there is no news on Macao.
 
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Actually you shouldnt be that surprised my nationalistic Chinese friend. There are many things you dont know about the U.K. We always look after our interests irregardless of what others might think, we dont give a ****. We are still allkiied with the U.S though, and joining this Bank wont change that for the foreseeable future. We are allies as well because it serves our interests by having the U.S as the worlds sole superpower and a close ally. So dont mistake that for something else. That doesnt means we wont make decisions that we think will best suite our interests.:) You should by now that we are the best strategists in this world even today. Afterall how do you think a small islands of few tens of millions managed to ruled half the world and even colonised/ruled a billion plus country like India, parts off the Americas, seized/defeated China and ruled hong kong and much of Asian countries Asia etc? loool

So keep calm and carry on, and dont get ahead of yourselves by claiming the U.S is going to collapse or lose all its allies/influence in Asia, it wont, the only difference is that China will grow more stronger and try to claim some pace for itself. But the U.S will still remain the dominant power in Asia for a long time to come IMO.baring a major revolution in Asia which i dont see happening anytime soon(since many Asian countries seem to look towards the U.S for protection than otherwise.lol). So yes this is just a small step or small chinese drop in a big U.S ocean.:) China still have long way to be able to really challenge U.S/western dominance in Asia, much less the world. But i believe China is heading in the right direction though, it still has a huge potential, case in point if China was to achieve even half what its Confucian east Asian peers like Japan and South Korea have achived then in terms of productivity per head then it will have at least twice U.S GDP. So still a longgg way to go to reach that true potential.:)
France and Germany aren't very happy with you undercutting them. If you didn't make the first move, no doubt Germany will pull the trigger first but you just undercut them.
 
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China shall ban US from joining it. :lol: We shall tell them bluntly this instituition is anti-US.

I agree 100% with you.

Diplomatically, all China has to do is to tell US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew that China is just too busy handling and processing all the applications. Then, say why don't we discuss later, i.e. after the deadline of 31 March. The US should get the message.

If I am Canada or Japan, I will not only jump in now, but I will dive in. I wouldn't wait for the US approval. They are too busy worrying about their own predicament.
 
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currently 45 members, our HSR is getting more crowded each passing day

Can you imagine South Korea and TW already applied and Japan is still watching at the sideline polling US blood pressure. Japan just can't pursue her own foreign policy :disagree:
 
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Taiwan's former VP, 蕭萬長, had a meeting with President Xi yesterday at the BOAO Forum and relayed Taiwan's intent to join the AIIB.

Given its particular status, China wishes to receive Taiwan's request through an appropriate channel (not in the capacity of a state, but, probably as Chinese Taipei). I guess work is being done on this.
 
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currently 45 members, our HSR is getting more crowded each passing day

Can you imagine South Korea and TW already applied and Japan is still watching at the sideline polling US blood pressure. Japan just can't pursue her own foreign policy :disagree:

Well Japan leads the ADB, so of course they will be the last to ever join your bank(if ever at all) which is a real competitor and even more to theirs. So no surprise there to be honest. Its not in their interests to do so, putting aside their reluctance of not wanting to annoy/anger the U.S.:enjoy:
 
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France and Germany aren't very happy with you undercutting them. If you didn't make the first move, no doubt Germany will pull the trigger first but you just undercut them.

That's why we are still one of the/if not the world's best strategists, reason Germany despite having more power/capabilities during the second world war,yet lost both world wars still.:bunny::enjoy: National interests are always paramount in geo politics and compromises need to be made when appropriate.:)
 
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Washington's U-turn on AIIB: Moral epiphany, or Machiavellian ploy?

Washington's U-turn on AIIB: Moral epiphany, or Machiavellian ploy?
2015-03-24 16:55 Xinhua Web Editor: Gu Liping

The Untied States has seemingly outgrown its childish paranoia against the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), but the encouraging development should not be allowed to go to the other extreme: a Machiavellian plot.

Signals have been beamed out of Washington of late that it is adopting a cooperative attitude toward the China-proposed initiative, which marks an apparent change of mind from its earlier suspicion and obstruction.

The U-turn of the world's sole superpower, which has developed an almost instinctive repulsion for whatever it images might turn into a threat to its hegemony, is overdue but still welcome, and also indicative of the attractiveness and all-win nature of the incipient institution.

But Washington needs to keep its AIIB epiphany pure and clean, and resist the temptation to load it with a Machiavellian ploy to convert the fledgling project into yet another tool for exerting its influence and getting its own way.

The AIIB is born out of and aimed at satisfying the huge demand for infrastructure investment in fast-growing Asia, a sum that has skyrocketed way out of the capacity of established regional and global lenders.

That means its creation will not only help break the infrastructure bottleneck and boost regional development, but almost certainly bring considerable returns to any party participating in or cooperating with the enterprise.

Thus the AIIB amounts to a new cornerstone to the foundation of the existing financial architecture, further underpinning instead of undermining the system, just as the Asian Development Bank and similar regional bodies have strengthened -- rather than weakened -- global lending and world development.

Another aspect of the AIIB's magnetism is that, as Beijing has insisted in chorus with other participants and aspirants, the AIIB will function as an open and inclusive organization dedicated cooperation and development, not as an arena to wield power and influence.

Given Washington's record on international affairs and preoccupation with dominance, the U.S. about-face has given rise to speculations that the superpower, since unable to scuttle the AIIB, now attempts to keep the China-initiated financial body on its own orbit by engaging with it.

Such theory, although easy to understand, is not necessarily true, but it is the United States that bears the onus to clear the air by making a convincing case that it does not have a hidden agenda.

And Washington had better to have waken up with a change of heart, not merely a change of tactic. For the AIIB members will not allow their urgently needed and highly promising project to be reduced to a chessboard of geopolitical game.
 
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Debate: China's investment bank alternative to World Bank?

PressTV-Can China AIIB bank replace World Bank?

France, Germany and Italy have announced that they will join the UK in becoming members of the Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).

In this edition of the Debate, Press TV asks senior political analyst Roger Von Hanwehr from New York City, and author of the "Big Oil & Their Bankers in the Persian Gulf", Dean Henderson from Missouri, about this new investment bank and how it differs from other international banks.
 
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An Indian's view of AIIB. It's an interesting read.

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AIIB: A morality play for India | Asia Times

AIIB: A morality play for India
Author: M.K. Bhadrakumar March 28, 2015

China’s foreign policy fired all eight cylinders on Saturday. There has been a stampede of countries wanting to be founder members of the Asian Infrastructure Development Bank [AIIB] – South Korea, Australia, Brazil, Russia, Netherlands, Switzerland, Georgia and so on. Even Taiwan — if only Beijing could find a way to admit an entity that it considers a part of China. Monday is the deadline for aspiring applicants.

Clearly, the United States’ ‘pivot’ to Asia is in trouble, big trouble, and without the pivot, there is uncertainty how a steady erosion in America’s standing in Asia can be averted. The US has been badly exposed as being at odds with the prevailing sentiment in the Asian region. The AIIB has busted a hole into the US’ ‘pivot’ strategy through which even the Indian elephant can pass. A Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement with the obsessive idea of ‘containment’ of China seems more problematic than ever.

What has happened is seen as a policy failure on the part of the Barack Obama administration and a manifestation of the dysfunctional American political system whereby the Congress could stall for 4 years already the quota reform measure for the International Monetary Fund [IMF] that would have pacified China by granting it a greater voice in the fund. But then, there is much more to it. China is aiming at something much bigger, much more profound in scope and objectives.

China is changing the balance of power in Asia itself. A historic power shift is under way. The document released in Beijing on Saturday on the ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ is breathtakingly ambitious in scope. If half of what it says could be realized, China will have already risen as a great power on the world stage exclusively on terms it set and negotiates for itself.

The stark alternatives sketched by pundits, drawn from European history and World War I as regards the dialectic involving the rise of great powers and the resistance to it by established powers, do not seem to be applicable to the Asian drama. Simply put, the European parallels are grossly inappropriate for contemporary Asia. China’s Asian neighbors are learning to live with China, are willing to engage with it while also preserving their relations with the US. China is comfortable with the idea, too. In strategic terms, China is leaving the US hardly any wriggle room but to take a second good look at Beijing’s standing offer to create a ‘new type of relationship’ between the two big powers.

The ‘Vision’ document titled “Vision And Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st Century Maritime Silk Road” details the action plan whereby China hopes to change the world political and economic landscape through participating in the development of countries along its proposed Silk Routes. In a nutshell, geo-economics is forcing geopolitics to the margins. By volunteering to share its prosperity with its Asian neighbors, Beijing rubbishes the petard of ‘assertive’ China, which the US has hoisted on the Asian landscape as the raison d’etre of its ‘pivot’ strategy. The document released on Saturday says,

“The Silk Road Economic Belt focuses on bringing together China, Central Asia, Russia and Europe (the Baltic); linking China with the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean Sea through Central Asia and West Asia; and connecting China with Southeast Asia, South Asia and the Indian Ocean. The 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road is designed to go from China’s coast to Europe through the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean in one route, and from China’s coast through the South China Sea to the South Pacific in the other.

“On land, the Initiative will focus on jointly building a new Eurasian Land Bridge and developing China-Mongolia-Russia, China-Central Asia-West Asia and China-Indochina Peninsula economic corridors.”

The Chinese initiative aims at promoting policy coordination with its partners, facilitating connectivity and investment and trade, financial integration (through building a currency stability system in Asia, for example).

On Saturday, President Xi Jinping inaugurated the annual Boao Forum and in his opening address too, China’s soft power took the centre stage. Xi harped on the need of an Asian community that eschews zero-sum mentality and cold-war mindset. Xi offered that China is willing to sign treaties of good-neighborliness and friendship and cooperation with all its neighbors. “What China needs most is a harmonious and stable domestic environment and a peaceful and tranquil international environment,” Xi said. He committed China to accommodate “the interests of others while pursuing own interests”.

In his speech, Xi presented the Chinese market as the driver of growth for the Asian economies. He outlined that China will import more than $10 trillion worth goods in the coming five-year period and proposes to make investments abroad in excess of $500 billion. Xi visualized that in excess of 500 million Chinese tourists will be making outbound visits during this period.

The Chinese thinking on the AIIB has evolved and it is far too simplistic to view it as a pincer aimed at the heart of the Bretton Woods system or in a spirit of competition with Washington. Clearly, China does not want to destroy the existing international financial system but instead seeks a greater say in its running and management and if that doesn’t happen, China will go its own way. In fact, Xi said China will promote a system of regional financial cooperation, explore a platform for exchanges and cooperation among Asian financial institutions and advance complementary and coordinated development between the AIIB and such multilateral financial institutions as the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank.

In the new matrix, China proposes to give full play to the AIIB and the Silk Road Fund by blending them with the sovereign wealth funds of countries along the Belt and Road and by encouraging commercial equity investment funds and private funds to participate in the key Silk Routes projects. The IMF has already shown interest in collaborating with the AIIB.

The AIIB membership drive has underscored the importance of the European states as Asia’s partner during a period when the region is passing through a major transition. On the one hand, the participation of the European countries ensures that China is obliged to mould the AIIB as an institution of the highest standard in transparency and efficiency. Indeed, the European countries’ participation in the AIIB helps shape its rules but on the other hand, it also offsets US opposition. Put differently, on the bigger plane of the global power dynamic, it also strengthens the Europe-Asia side of the US-Europe-Asia strategic and economic triangle, which dominates the world’s economy and politics today.

From an Indian perspective, Saturday triggered depressing thoughts of despondency.To be sure, the so-called US-India Joint Strategic Vision Statement for the Asia-Pacific and Indian Ocean Region signed during the visit by President Obama to Delhi hardly two months ago has been rendered irrelevant and archaic. Clearly, India, which, notwithstanding its profession of devotion to the ‘Asian Century’, is unable to figure out whether China’s rise is a good thing or not, has been taken for granted by Beijing as a partner in the Belt and Road Initiative. Beijing has left India with no choice but to tag along lest it gets stranded on the Silk Road.

China seems one hundred percent sure that Delhi cannot sustain its zero-sum mindset, when Asian countries all around it – big and small – find it attractive to partake of the Chinese initiative, which they see as inclusive, non-prescriptive, based on market rules and in a ‘win-win’ spirit of mutual benefit out of common development. China’s extraordinary ability in the geopolitical sphere makes Indian diplomacy look provincial and out of touch with the Asian and global realities.
 
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China welcomes Denmark, Australia to AIIB
English.news.cn | 2015-03-29
BEIJING, March 29 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Finance on Sunday welcomed the decisions of Denmark and Australia to apply to join the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).

Denmark filed its application letter on Saturday, while Australia followed on Sunday, the ministry said in a statement.

Should all existing members approve the applications, Denmark will become a founding member of the AIIB on April 12 and Australia on April 13, according to the statement.

The AIIB, which will support infrastructure projects in Asia, is expected to be established by the end of this year.

The application deadline is March 31 and the founding members will be confirmed on April 15.

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Danmark, Australia are in.

There are 45 members as of 28 March 2015. Argentina, Belgium, Canada, Mexico, South Africa, and Ukraine are under consideration of joining the AIIB. The United States and Japan have remained skeptical about the negotiation.

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Now is the time for the world to adjust to China's global ambition - Telegraph

It may have become fashionable to talk down China's prospects, but the pace of its expansion remains astonishing

HalliganBridge1_3248762b.jpg

The Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge is the world's longest and runs for 164.8km

By Liam Halligan

28 Mar 2015

What’s the longest bridge in the world? It’s not San Francisco’s Golden Gate, or Saudi Arabia’s King Fahd Causeway (as a friend insisted when I asked him) or even one of those really long “over the horizon” ones in Scandinavia.

The world’s longest bridge in the world – by far – is the Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridgeon the Beijing-to-Shanghai high-speed rail link. Stretching across the Yangtze delta, and completed in 2010, the Danyang-Kunshan is no less than 102 miles long. That’s over 29 times the length of Bromford Viaduct near Birmingham, the UK’s longest bridge. And it’s 116 times longer than the Humber Bridge, our widest single-span crossing.

bridge_1934315b.jpg



The world’s second-longest bridge is also in China. The Tianjin Grand stretches over 70 miles long, part of the Beijing-to-Shanghai rail link and also completed in 2010. The third-longest bridge is Chinese too. But the Weinan Weihe Grand Bridge is on the Zhengzhou-Xi’an railway and spans just under 50 miles.

No less than nine of the world’s 12 longest bridges are in China, all of them built over the last decade or so. The longest bridge in America, the 24-mile Lake Pontchartrain Causeway in Louisiana, was opened in 1956.

It’s easy to cite superlatives about China’s development. But the pace at which the People’s Republic is now building bridges, and the record-smashing scale of its ambition, is quite astonishing.

Since adopting market-based reforms in the late-1970s, China has grown on average by 9.8pc a year, compared with 2.5pc in America. Back in 1980, the economy was just one 10th that of the US – and still just half, as recently as 2004.

Last October, though, the International Monetary Fund quietly published estimates showing China’s annual GDP at $17.6 trillion (£11.8 trillion), compared with $17.4 trillion in America.

The US remains far richer per head, of course, with the average American commanding an income four times that of their Chinese counterpart. And the IMF’s estimates were on a “purchasing power parity” basis, including cross-border variations in living costs. Despite these qualifications, the symbolism remains enormous. While America had been the world’s largest economy since 1872, when it overtook Britain, the US no longer holds an unequivocal claim to top spot.

It’s fashionable to talk down China...

Yet the growth gulf between China and the West remains vast. Despite enormous “recovery” fanfare, America grew just 2.4pc during the last quarter, only a touch above the sluggish six-year average since the 2008 collapse. The eurozone remains close to recession. And while UK growth could reach 3pc this year, our expansion is far too reliant on rising personal and government debt.

As the Chinese economy keeps out-pacing the West, the country commands ever more geopolitical power – and I’d highlight three very different illustrations of this. Just before his recent Budget, George Osborne, the Chancellor, announced that the UK will become a founder member of the Asian Infrastructure Development Bank (AIIB) – a China-led financial institution that could one day rival the World Bank. This drew an extremely barbed response from the US, with a White House official accusing Britain of “constantly accommodating” China.

While this public diplomatic spat between close allies was unusual, what has since happened has been extraordinary. Since Beijing launched the $50bn AIIB last October, US officials have insisted Western countries “could help shape the standards and rules” this institution will adopt “by staying on the outside”.

America is concerned the AIIB will act as an instrument of Chinese foreign policy, as has the US-led World Bank since it was founded in the aftermath of the Second World War.

After the UK defiantly decided to join AIIB, France, Italy and Germany then followed – leaving the US looking isolated. While America views China as a geo-political rival, the two powers now vying for supremacy in the Pacific basin, West European nations are more mindful of its importance as a future trading partner.

These divergent views burst into the open last week, presenting America with a tough dilemma – remain alone outside the AIIB, or be seen to accept the will of the rest of the world. The answer seems to be acceptance. The Washington-based IMF just announced it would, despite earlier opposition, be “delighted” to co-operate with the AIIB. And Japan, America’s staunchest Asian ally, has also indicated it’s now “happy” to work with the Beijing-based institution too. No matter that Japan currently controls the US-backed Asian Development Bank, the precise body the AIIB is hoping to usurp.

The developed nations, whether they like it or not, must significantly increase their trade with China. The UK, with an external deficit now equal to 6pc of GDP, the second-largest in half a century, has lately become far less vocal about Beijing “human rights abuses”. The AIIB, meanwhile, is part of a concerted Chinese attempt to build a Sino-centric global financial system, as an alternative to America’s hegemony.

Along with AIIB, there’s also the New Development Bank – widely known as the “Brics Bank” – jointly founded with Russia, India, Brazil and South Africa and located in Shanghai. Then there’s a planned IMF-style contingent reserve facility, together with a further development bank linked to the Shanghai Co-operation Organisation, a six-country Eurasian political, economic and military grouping dominated by China and Russia.

At last November’s Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC) summit, hosted in Beijing, the Chinese also unveiled a $40bn “Silk Road Fund”, to finance a network of railways and airports linking China with Central Asia – another area where the US has long asserted political and military influence.

That Beijing should seek to exercise power across Asia, and beyond, is hardly surprising. China isn’t only the world’s growth engine but also bankroller-in-chief to the US government. The Chinese central bank holds an estimated $1,270bn of US Treasuries, up from just $50bn back in 2001.

Anyone who doubts China’s ambition should look beyond the country’s domestic infrastructure development and witness what’s happening in Central America. In 1914, having completed a task abandoned by the French, the US proudly opened the Panama canal. Representing the biggest engineering project on earth, and securing control of a high share of global trade flows, the 48-mile waterway – linking the Atlantic and Pacific and saving a 9,000-mile detour around South America – marked the start of the US world domination.

Well, with their domestic bridge-building record behind them, the Chinese have now started work on a 170-mile canal that will cut through Lake Nicaragua. This is a direct rival to the Panama transit, and one that will be able to accommodate even larger ships (despite the recent Panama canal upgrade). While there’s scepticism Beijing will hit its 2019 opening target, the chances are high this game-changing canal will be built.

Then, in the background, there’s ongoing Chinese pressure to dilute the reserve currency status of the dollar – an “exorbitant privilege” which allows the US to print “hard currency” to pay back its debts.

Last week Premier Li Keqiang quietly asked the IMF to include the yuan in its “special drawing rights” basket – an act that would make it easier for other countries to store their reserves in the Chinese currency. Mindful of the dollar’s unique “reserve currency” status, Washington is likely to resist.

Yet the shape of the global economy is rapidly changing, a multi-currency reserve system is inevitable and this is a change America must embrace.
 
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