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AIIB (Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank) news

Typical western media trying to gloss over US' loss, blame the Europeans and downplay China's win.....
When you go through the details, you will find it's a big loss to US and its lackey; Japan.
The AIIB is a big win for China.

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AIIB: US is not the only loser, and China is not such a big winner
27 May 2015 9:59AM

The recent rush by Western countries to join the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) before the 30 March deadline set by China was widely, and rightly, seen as a policy failure for the US. Earlier, the US had openly opposed the bank.

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Photo courtesy of Flickr user World Bank Photo Collection.

The US has also resisted reform of the Bretton Woods institutions, reforms which might have deterred the emerging economies from establishing new banks. A moderate reform of IMF quotas approved by the Fund's other members has been stuck in the US Congress for five years, aggravating China and the rest of the world.

In the same vein, but less widely known, a few years ago the US and Japan turned down a proposal by China and other Asian countries for a 'special capital increase' in the Asian Development Bank (ADB). This would have allowed these countries to channel some excess capital into the ADB and increase their voting shares in an institution which has served the West well. From a US perspective this would surely have been preferable to the establishment of a new bank by China.

The US has also been inept at reading its allies' intentions. It assumed that it could convince Australia, South Korea and its European allies to remain outside the AIIB. But once the UK broke ranks on 12 March and decided to join the bank, it became clear that accommodating China was the higher priority for virtually everyone.

But the policy failures do not stop with the US.

By rushing to apply to the AIIB in the last two and a half weeks of March, European countries displayed a remarkable lack of foresight and coordination in dealing with China, a skillful counter-party.

Had the European countries been strategic about joining the AIIB, they could already last year have formulated a common position on a raft of issues from the bank's management and governance structure to ensuring its integrity. They could have made these conditions for joining, and maintained a firm common front. By signing up piecemeal at the eleventh hour they have played their trump card and significantly weakened their negotiating stance.

Nor does Japan emerge unscathed. Once it became clear that much of the Western world would join the AIIB, Japan considered its options and announced its continued support for the US. But prioritising its loyalty to Washington over the financing of infrastructure in Asia can hardly have gone down well with its neighbours.

Within Japan, the Ministries of Finance and Foreign Affairs were rebuked by the major political parties for failing to warn them that Western countries might join the AIIB. Now that Tokyo has helped Washington to save face, it may also reverse course and join the bank.

Amid these missteps, the conventional wisdom is that China has emerged as the winner. However, this is only half true. Admittedly, China's multilateral bank has now become a much larger and more visible initiative than Beijing could have imagined. But the last-minute scramble to join caught Chinese authorities by surprise. China may have got more than it bargained for.

China's initiative started out as an Asian bank, which it could easily have dominated. In early March it had 27 prospective members, a month later it had 57, with more lining up to join. The AIIB now includes all of South and Southeast Asia, most of Central and East Asia and the Caucasus, much of Western Europe, Australia, Brazil, New Zealand, Russia, South Africa and several Middle Eastern countries, including Iran and its adversaries Israel and Saudi Arabia.

The diverse membership opens the bank to political and economic pressures that China had not expected to manage. To accommodate its members, there is already talk that the bank may have up to ten vice presidents. This would be a far cry from the lean organisation it was supposed to be.

What then are the key lessons from the AIIB experience? Despite the plethora of policy papers, books and reports on how the West and China ought to manage their relationship, all parties still have a lot to learn. A thorough stock-taking of their recent missteps would be a good place to start.


So which stage the Western media now?

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This is very true. Without the AIIB, Japan would not have put this money trying to do some catch up....
US would also like to throw some money too, only if they have some to spare ....


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AIIB triggered Japan's US$110bn ADB injection: academic
Xinhua | 2015-05-28 | 09:05 (GMT+8)

AIIB.Shizo.Abe.JPG

Japan's prime minister, Shinzo Abe, gives a press conference in Tokyo, May 14. (Photo/Xinhua)

Japan's US$110 billion investment in the Asian Development Bank (ADB) announced last Thursday was triggered by the establishment of the China-proposed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), a leading Australian academic has said.

In a recent telephone interview with Xinhua, deputy director of the China Relations Institute professor James Laurenceson said Japan's further investment into the ADB would not have happened if it were not for the AIIB.

"It means that the AIIB is actually achieving one of its goals which is to increase funds for infrastructure investment." Laurenceson said. "That is why even if the AIIB only provides some gentle competition to the existing players, the region itself is going to be better off," he added.

For many countries of the region, Laurenceson said what China is proposing is more genuinely win-win than anything they have seen to date, which countries in the region are going to want to support on top of the ADB.

"There is nothing wrong with the existing players for countries in the region to maintain the ADB," Laurenceson said. "These are institutions that can quite happily work together. It's in (the regions) best interests and it's in their own national interests to support the AIIB."

Laurenceson said that while people talk about the competition between the two banks, the reality is that the demand for finance is so great, and in practical terms competition will be limited.

"The ADB says currently, on their numbers, they only provide 1.5% of the total demand for infrastructure funds," Laurenceson said. "Even with the AIIB, with this extra capital going into the Asia Development Bank, the demand for funds is still going to be far greater."

Laurenceson said the AIIB isn't going to take offense if the ADB gives a loan to a developing country in the region, negating any potential geopolitical conflict.
 
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The following is by a columnist; David Pilling.

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A bank made in China and better than the western model
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David Pilling

It is possible that the AIIB will even exceed the standards of existing development lenders

AIIB.Original.21.Members_82038396.jpg


Groucho Marx said he would refuse to join any club that would have him as a member. He did not however try to discourage his friends from signing up. That is what the US did when it came to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, a China-led institution that Washington regarded with some suspicion.

One Beijing-based US executive scoffed at the very notion that China could run a multilateral institution. It did not know the first thing about how such a bank should be governed, he said.

Opponents of the AIIB whispered that it would lend to dictators, despoil the environment and trample on human rights. (Western institutions, of course, have never done any such thing.) The AIIB may turn out very differently from this caricature.

It is just possible that it will even exceed the standards of existing institutions. With 57 members, including Europeans such as the UK, Germany and Sweden, it is evolving fast and may end up an entirely different institution from the one Beijing envisaged.

Last week, members met in Singapore to draw up articles of agreement. With input from both China, which has proved it knows a thing or two about development, and western countries, which have a better record of implementing safeguards, the project has made a promising start.

The bank will have initial capital of $100bn, double that originally intended. That will make it a serious challenger to the Asian Development Bank, the 50-year-old Tokyo-dominated regional bank with capital of $150bn. China will have the biggest capital quota, probably about 25 per cent. India will have the second-largest, then Russia, Germany, Australia and Indonesia. Overall, 75 per cent of the bank’s capital — and therefore voting rights — are likely to be Asian. Initial indications are that China will not have a veto.

The bank will be based in Beijing. It will have a non-resident board that meets periodically in the Chinese capital and convenes by video conference. At first glance, this could raise the suspicion that the AIIB will have less rigorous oversight than the World Bank, with its resident board that approves all loans. Yet many see the World Bank board as expensive — it costs $70m a year — and cumbersome.

David Dollar, a World Bank veteran who has acted as an unpaid consultant to the AIIB, says the World Bank had become so slow and risk-averse that most governments had stopped coming to it for infrastructure financing. He quotes an Indian official, exasperated at the pace of World Bank-sponsored projects, as saying: “Mr Dollar, the combination of our bureaucracy and your bureaucracy is deadly.”

The hope, he says, is that the AIIB can combine the best of both worlds. “The enthusiastic response of developing countries in Asia to the AIIB concept reflects their sympathy with the idea that a bank can have good safeguards and still be quicker and more efficient than the existing banks,” he writes.

In Jin Liqun, tipped to become the AIIB’s first president, China’s new institution has one of the country’s most experienced technocrats. He is a former deputy finance minister and a former ADB vice-president. His job will not be easy. With such high-profile western involvement, the AIIB will find its projects (a dam in Myanmar here, a highway through an Indonesian township there) scrutinised by board members from the likes of Germany. By inviting in so many foreign participants, Beijing has probably given up on the idea that the AIIB can be a crude instrument of Chinese diplomacy. It may even be having buyers’ regret.

In one way, though, the bank is a success before it has even started. It has triggered what one commentator calls “infrastructure wars”. The ADB has performed some accounting magic in order to increase the amount it can lend. ADB officials say the bank will review approval procedures so that it can match the AIIB’s expected greater speed. On the day that AIIB members met in Singapore, Shinzo Abe, Japan’s prime minister, announced that Tokyo would make $110bn available for infrastructure projects in Asia over five years. These, he implied, would be of higher quality than those led by China.

Like Groucho Marx, Japan and the US are not rushing to join the new club. Yet if the AIIB proves as effective as its advocates hope, before long even Tokyo and Washington may be angling for membership.
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Hmmm... The Japanese are still mulling over, just couldn't let go..... To join or not to join.
I thought they have gotten over it, but apparently I was wrong.


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Japan Shouldn’t Join AIIB for Time Being, LDP Panel to Tell Abe
by Maiko Takahashi
3:30 PM AEST | June 1, 2015

Japan shouldn’t join the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank until governance concerns are addressed, a panel of ruling party lawmakers will advise Prime Minister Shinzo Abe this week, according to a person with direct knowledge of the plan.

The Liberal Democratic Party’s AIIB panel will discuss a draft recommendation on June 3 and submit a final report to Abe before Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso meets his Chinese counterpart on June 6 in Beijing, the person said, asking not to be named because the plan is not yet public.

The recommendation will express concerns over the governance of the AIIB and the possibility that China will be able to exert strong influence over areas of investment, the person said. The panel doesn’t favor joining the infrastructure bank, but keeping options open so the government can use its position as a diplomatic card in talks with China.

The new $100-billion lender being established by China will boost Beijing’s presence in the region’s infrastructure business. Japan, which along the U.S. chose not to join 57 other nations in setting up the AIIB, still plans to increase infrastructure spending in the region. The Asian Development Bank, which is headed by Japan, will expand funding for infrastructure projects to about $110 billion over the next five years.

“This is more about politics than economics, as Japan has the ADB and doesn’t really need to join,” said Hiromichi Shirakawa, chief Japan economist at Credit Suisse Group AG. “Japan is likely to continue to follow the U.S.”

Shirakawa added that Japan could lose out on some investment projects in Asia if the AIIB gains influence.
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Hmmm... The Japanese are still mulling over, just couldn't let go..... To join or not to join.
I thought they have gotten over it, but apparently I was wrong.


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Japan Shouldn’t Join AIIB for Time Being, LDP Panel to Tell Abe
by Maiko Takahashi
3:30 PM AEST | June 1, 2015

Japan shouldn’t join the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank until governance concerns are addressed, a panel of ruling party lawmakers will advise Prime Minister Shinzo Abe this week, according to a person with direct knowledge of the plan.

The Liberal Democratic Party’s AIIB panel will discuss a draft recommendation on June 3 and submit a final report to Abe before Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso meets his Chinese counterpart on June 6 in Beijing, the person said, asking not to be named because the plan is not yet public.

The recommendation will express concerns over the governance of the AIIB and the possibility that China will be able to exert strong influence over areas of investment, the person said. The panel doesn’t favor joining the infrastructure bank, but keeping options open so the government can use its position as a diplomatic card in talks with China.

The new $100-billion lender being established by China will boost Beijing’s presence in the region’s infrastructure business. Japan, which along the U.S. chose not to join 57 other nations in setting up the AIIB, still plans to increase infrastructure spending in the region. The Asian Development Bank, which is headed by Japan, will expand funding for infrastructure projects to about $110 billion over the next five years.

“This is more about politics than economics, as Japan has the ADB and doesn’t really need to join,” said Hiromichi Shirakawa, chief Japan economist at Credit Suisse Group AG. “Japan is likely to continue to follow the U.S.”

Shirakawa added that Japan could lose out on some investment projects in Asia if the AIIB gains influence.
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I guess it is not too bad if Japan decided not to join. They already missed the boat to become the founding member. Hence, even if they joined, their weight will not be in proportion to their economy. If they had joined and become founding member, then, this would lessen China's weight and given the US a bridgehead within the institution to blackmail or derail it through the Japanese government.
 
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When will AIIB give its first loan?
And BRICS bank?

Bretton Woods institutions IMF and WB born after WWII.
will WWIII born after AIIB and BRICS bank first loan? :what:

Is AIIB the real reason of USA bullying China last months? And it doesnt China artificials islands neither nothing like that :D.
 
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AIIB in quest for ‘best bank’ standards, says French ambassador to China
French ambassador to China says members of the new lender aim to lay the governance foundation for an efficient financial institution

Victoria Ruan
PUBLISHED : Monday, 01 June, 2015, 11:35pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 02 June, 2015, 8:33am

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French Ambassador Maurice Gourdault-Montagne. Photo: Simon Song

Member states of the US$100 billion Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank aim to put high standards of internal governance in place, ensuring the lender becomes "the best bank possible", according to France's ambassador to China.

In an exclusive interview with the South China Morning Post, Maurice Gourdault-Montagne said chief negotiators from the AIIB's 57 prospective founding members met in Singapore last month to discuss governance goals, including sustainability, safeguards, debt policy and procurement.

Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the Group of Seven industrialised nations - four of which are AIIB founding members - met on Friday, urging the new lender to follow international standards and ensure transparency.

"We want to build up with other founding members the best bank possible, the most solid, the one that can lend money efficiently to countries that require the money," Gourdault-Montagne said.

Beijing has pledged to streamline the bank's governance and avoid the inefficient practices of lenders dominated by the West. The United States, in particular, has publicly expressed concern over how the AIIB - which is due to be launched by the end of this year - would operate. But that has not dissuaded some of its closest allies such as Britain and France from signing up.

There were some "good practices" and "some difficulties and some hurdles" in the members' discussions so far, Gourdault-Montagne said, without elaborating.

Another diplomat told the Post earlier that the bank was likely to adopt a high voting threshold for "key decisions". The mechanism would mirror that of some existing lenders, although those institutions have also been criticised for inefficiency .

Gourdault-Montagne said the AIIB should not sacrifice rules for efficiency. "Of course we want the bank to be efficient. But we should also respect the rules."

Responding to a report that Asian members would have 75 per cent of the AIIB's voting rights, Gourdault-Montagne said: "This is the beginning. There are Asian countries and non-Asian countries, founding countries and non-founding countries … We know the rules at the beginning are such and then there'll be discussions."

He also said the capital split among nations would take factors such as gross domestic product into consideration.

France felt it necessary to join the AIIB because of its economic links with China in a range of areas from nuclear power to aerospace manufacturing, as well as their long-standing political ties, Gourdault-Montagne said. "It's always better to be in than to be out," he said.

He said the members would discuss whether the AIIB would have a branch office in Europe. He also said Jin Liqun , secretary general of the AIIB's multilateral interim secretariat, was talented and experienced.

"He is also someone who knows the interests of China. He has a farsighted vision about what the bank must be."
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Aquino wants to ensure China-led AIIB isn't prone to politics
June 3, 2015 4:42pm

President Benigno Aquino III on Wednesday said the Philippines is still studying a proposal to join the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).

In a briefing with Japanese reporters during his state visit to Japan, Aquino said he particularly wants to make sure the AIIB will not fall prey to conflicts between China and other countries.

“I think it behooves our sense of fiscal responsibility to look at how the governance structure of the AIIB will be, so that the economic help that is supposed to be afforded will not be subjected to vagaries of politics between our countries and the lead proponent,” Aquino said.

The President nevertheless admitted the Philippines has “tremendous infrastructure needs.”

“We are studying the invitation to join the AIIB, and we have to determine whether or not it is a net positive or not,” he added.

Aquino also cited a million-dollar loan granted by China to former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s administration, which he said “was neither concessional nor helpful to our country.”

Last year, China launched the AIIB, which is seen to rival multilateral lenders such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

The Philippines and China are currently locked in territorial dispute over parts of the South China Sea. Manila has already sought international arbitration to resolve the sea row. Andreo Calonzo/VS, GMA News


Aquino wants to ensure China-led AIIB isn't prone to politics | Economy | GMA News Online

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Phl, China drop North Rail
By Aurea Calica (The Philippine Star) | Updated September 26, 2012 - 12:00am

In the middle of the territorial disputes over the Scarborough (Panatag) Shoal, China decided to “call” the official development assistance that it lent the Philippines for the North Rail project, he said.

“It was ‘called’ – meaning it became due and demandable. So it was discussed how we would pay for it and since we got the money, we would settle it. According to Secretary (Cesar) Purisima of (the Department of) Finance, the negotiations have started and we will pay it in installments over the next two years. But this was a multi-year long-term loan that was suddenly called,” Roxas said.

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2012/09/26/852997/phl-china-drop-north-rail
 
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Aquino also cited a million-dollar loan granted by China to former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s administration, which he said “was neither concessional nor helpful to our country.”

Lmao what gives him the idea that China wants to help his country?If we really want to help Philippines,we would already have Aquino III surgically removed via a drone attack.

Having a mentally unstable president for the pinoys is actually in our best interest,he can call us nazis,but I really wish him stay in power forever :partay:
 
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The Philippines leader should not have revealed his master strategy before he decides to join or not. Now we all know what is his intention and China can definitely easily shut down the Philippines in the AIIB. It can easily ensure that the country can never get a loan, if Beijing decides that the Philippines is n more than an agent provocateur and cheap fifth column.

Mr. President Aquino has become a liability for the Philippines.
 
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China, India to be biggest AIIB shareholders

Source:Global Times Published: 2015-6-4 22:38:03

China and India will become the top two shareholders in the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Thursday.

China will be the biggest shareholder by holding a stake of around 30 percent in the AIIB, followed by India which will own an 8 percent stake, the report said, citing an unidentified Indian official.

As for voting rights, India will have around 7.5 percent, the newspaper said.

The quotas were determined on the basis of the AIIB founding members' GDP and their purchasing power parity, according to the report.

The report came after a meeting attended by AIIB's 57 prospective founding members in late May. The three-day meeting in Singapore concluded discussions and finalized the Articles of Agreement (AOA) for the bank, but gave no details about the AIIB's ownership structure.

It is expected that the AOA would be ready for signing by the end of June and the AIIB would be operational by the end of this year, the AIIB said in a statement on May 22.

The WSJ report also fits with experts' estimation.

"Whether measured by nominal GDP or the purchasing power parity-adjusted GDP, it makes sense for China to be the biggest capital contributor and the most influential decision-maker among all the Asian members," Ma Tieying, an economist with Singapore-based DBS Bank, told the Global Times in an earlier interview in May.

China, India to be biggest AIIB shareholders - Global Times
 
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US Congress pushed China into launching AIIB, says Bernanke
David Pilling and Josh Noble in Hong Kong
June 2, 2015 12:30 pm

AIIB.Ben.Bernanke.jpg

Ben Bernanke says he understands why other countries say, ‘well let’s take our marbles and go home'

Beijing was pushed into launching the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank by US lawmakers’ refusal to give China greater clout in existing multilateral institutions, Ben Bernanke has said.

“The US Congress is largely at fault for all that’s happening,” the former chairman of the Federal Reserve said in Hong Kong on Tuesday.

America’s legislature blocked a 2010 International Monetary Fund agreement to shift 6 per cent of quota — and voting rights — to emerging economies, which Mr Bernanke believes would have “better reflected the increasing role of China” and other nations.

“The US Congress has not approved it. They should, they haven’t,” Mr Bernanke said. “So I understand why other countries say, ‘well let’s take our marbles and go home’.”

The AIIB, which will be capitalised at $100bn, now has 57 members including most big European economies.

Mr Bernanke’s remarks add to those of other senior US figures who argue that Washington has mishandled its response to China’s ambition to play a bigger role in the international economy.

Lawrence Summers, former US Treasury secretary, wrote recently that US cold-shouldering of the AIIB may be remembered as the moment it “lost its role as the underwriter of the global economic system”.

Mr Bernanke said those remarks were “a little strong” but agreed it was “unfortunate” that China had felt the need to go its own way. “It would be better to have a globally unified system and allow resources to go where they are needed,” he said.

However, the former Fed chairman played down the practical implications of the AIIB, saying the bank was largely symbolic.

“There’s now a huge amount of private capital flows going in and out of emerging markets, including money that goes into infrastructure projects,” he said.

According to a former senior official at the Asian Development Bank, which is dominated by Japan and the US, ADB lending accounts for less than 2 per cent of Asia’s infrastructure needs.

Mr Bernanke also said too much attention was being focused on the internationalisation of the renminbi, which was as much a matter of “national prestige” as of practical economic value. In reality, he said, the Chinese currency’s share of global reserves was “very tiny” and even its share of trade settlement was “modest”.

China should continue gradual steps to open up its capital account, to deepen its bond markets and to allow a bigger role for the private sector, Mr Bernanke advised.

These were all preconditions to make the renminbi a reserve currency, he said, but they were more important as a means of improving capital allocation. The ultimate goal, he said, was to shift China’s economic model from one dominated by heavy industry and investment to one in which the consumer and the service industry played a much bigger role.
 
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China, India to be biggest AIIB shareholders

Source:Global Times Published: 2015-6-4 22:38:03

China and India will become the top two shareholders in the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Thursday.

China will be the biggest shareholder by holding a stake of around 30 percent in the AIIB, followed by India which will own an 8 percent stake, the report said, citing an unidentified Indian official.

As for voting rights, India will have around 7.5 percent, the newspaper said.

The quotas were determined on the basis of the AIIB founding members' GDP and their purchasing power parity, according to the report.

The report came after a meeting attended by AIIB's 57 prospective founding members in late May. The three-day meeting in Singapore concluded discussions and finalized the Articles of Agreement (AOA) for the bank, but gave no details about the AIIB's ownership structure.

It is expected that the AOA would be ready for signing by the end of June and the AIIB would be operational by the end of this year, the AIIB said in a statement on May 22.

The WSJ report also fits with experts' estimation.

"Whether measured by nominal GDP or the purchasing power parity-adjusted GDP, it makes sense for China to be the biggest capital contributor and the most influential decision-maker among all the Asian members," Ma Tieying, an economist with Singapore-based DBS Bank, told the Global Times in an earlier interview in May.

China, India to be biggest AIIB shareholders - Global Times

Brilliant news :yahoo::yahoo::yahoo:
 
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