🔍
China's trillion dollar plan to dominate global trade - YouTube
Channel: Vox
[2]
There’s a new highway in Pakistan.
[7]
And a new rail terminal in Kazakhstan.
[11]
A sea port in Sri Lanka recently opened.
[13]
As well as this bridge in rural Laos.
[16]
What’s interesting is that they’re all
part of one country’s project that spans
[20]
3 continents and touches over 60% of the world’s
population.
[25]
If you connect the dots, it’s not hard to
see which country that is.
[29]
This is China's Belt and Road Initiative -- the
most ambitious infrastructure project in modern
[34]
history that's designed to reroute global
trade.
[38]
It's how China plans to become the world’s
next superpower.
[52]
It’s 2013 and Chinese president, Xi Jinping
[54]
is giving a speech in Kazakhstan where he
mentions the Ancient Silk Road:
[58]
A network of trade routes that spread goods,
ideas, and culture across Europe, the Middle
[63]
East, and China as far back as 200 BC.
[65]
He then says:
[67]
"we should take an innovative approach and
jointly build an economic belt along the Silk
[75]
Road"
A month later, Xi is in Indonesia:
[81]
"The two sides should work together to build a maritime silk road for the 21st century"
[88]
These two phrases were the first mentions
of Xi’s legacy project, the multi-trillion
[92]
dollar Belt and Road Initiative, or BRI.
[95]
They’re also the two components of the plan.
[97]
There’s an overland Economic Belt of 6 corridors
that serves as new routes to get goods in
[102]
and out of China.
[104]
Like this railroad connecting China to London.
[106]
And these gas pipelines from the Caspian sea to
China
[109]
And a high-speed train network in South East
Asia.
[112]
Then there’s the maritime silk road -- a
chain of seaports stretching from the South
[117]
China Sea to Africa that also directs trade
to and from China.
[121]
The BRI also includes oil refineries, industrial
parks, power plants, mines, and fiber-optic
[126]
networks - all designed to make it easier
for the world to trade with China.
[130]
So far, over 60 countries have reportedly
signed agreements for these projects.
[135]
And the list is growing, because China promotes
it as a win-win for everyone.
[138]
Take, for example, the BRI’s flagship project:
Pakistan.
[141]
Pause for Pakistan
Like many countries in Central and South Asia,
[145]
Pakistan has a stagnant economy, and a corruption
problem.
[149]
It wasn’t a popular place for foreign investment,
that is until China came along.
[153]
In 2001, China offered to build a brand new
port in the small fishing town of Gwadar.
[158]
By 2018, the port as well as highway and railway
networks became a $62 billion dollar Corridor
[164]
within the BRI.
[166]
It’s where the Economic Belt meets the Maritime
Silk Road.
[169]
And it seemed to benefit both countries.
[171]
Pakistan saw its highest GDP growth in 8 years
and forged a tight relationship with a major
[176]
world power.
[178]
China, on the other hand, secured a new alternative
route for goods, especially, oil and gas from
[183]
the Middle East.
[184]
Through projects like these, it also found
a way to boost its economy.
[188]
Chinese construction companies that had fewer
opportunities within their own country saw
[192]
a huge boost from BRI contracts — 7 out
of the 10 biggest construction firms in the
[197]
world are now Chinese.
[200]
What tips the balance in China’s favor even
more is a requirement that it be involved
[204]
in building these projects.
[206]
In Pakistan for example, Chinese workers have
directly built projects, like this highway
[211]
here, and a Chinese firm has worked with locals
on a railway here in Serbia.
[215]
China’s involvement is one of its very few
demands and that’s set these deals apart
[219]
so far.
[220]
See, typically, to get investment from the
West, countries have to meet strict ethical
[224]
standards.
[226]
But China’s offered billions of dollars
— mostly in loans — with far fewer conditions.
[230]
So, it’s no surprise the BRI has been a
big hit with the less-democratic countries
[235]
in the region.
[236]
China has signed agreements with Authoritarian
governments
[239]
Military regimes.
[240]
And some of the most corrupt countries in
the world.
[242]
It’s even affiliated with, Afghanistan,
Ukraine, Yemen, and Iraq; all currently splintered
[247]
by conflict.
[249]
Because of China's willingness to loan money
to unreliable countries, many experts have
[253]
called the BRI a risky plan.
[255]
Eventually, these countries will have to pay
China back -- but corruption and conflict
[260]
make that payback unlikely.
[262]
A recent report found that many countries
indebted to China are vulnerable, including
[266]
8 that are at high risk of being unable to
pay.
[269]
So why does China keep lending?
[271]
Because there’s more to the BRI than just
economics:
[274]
In Sri Lanka, China loaned about 1.5 billion
[278]
dollars for a new deep-water port.
[280]
It was a key stop on the Maritime Silk Road.
[283]
But by 2017 it was clear Sri Lanka couldn’t
pay back the loan, so instead, they gave China
[287]
control of the port as part of a 99-year lease.
[290]
China also controls the strategic port in
Pakistan - where it has a 40-year lease, It’s
[295]
pushing for a similar agreement in Myanmar,
and it just opened an actual Chinese naval
[300]
base in Djibouti.
[302]
These are all signs of what’s called the
String of Pearls theory.
[305]
It predicts that China is trying to establish
a string of naval bases in the Indian Ocean
[309]
that will allow it to station ships and guard
shipping routes that move through the region.
[314]
So while China’s not getting its money back,
its still achieving some very important strategic
[319]
goals.
[320]
China’s growing influence challenges the
status of the US, which has been the world’s
[324]
lone super-power for the last several decades.
[327]
Isolation is trending in the US meaning it’s
investing less and therefore losing influence
[331]
around the world.
[333]
The BRI is China's way of leveraging power
to become a global leader.
[336]
By building relationships and taking control
of global trade, China is well on its way.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





