China’s
emergence as the ‘factory of the world’, based on its focus on exporting
labour-intensive manufactures, is well-known. Less well-known is the role that
infrastructure played in this strategy.
From
1992 to 2011 China spent 8.5 per cent of GDP on infrastructure, much more than
the developing country average of 2–4 per cent, according to a 2013 McKinsey Global Institute
report. And, from 1992 to 2007, China spent US$120 billion on
building 35,000 kilometres of highways.
China’s
push for infrastructure development within its borders picked up pace with its
Western Development or ‘Go West’ policy, implemented in 2000. Under this
policy, the government sought to address the growing economic disparity between
the prosperous coastal region and the inner western region by building
infrastructure towards the hinterland, and by attracting investments to the
west.
Last
year, China devised a ‘New Silk Roads’ policy to enhance connectivity with
neighbouring countries. This policy has two components: a ‘Silk Road Economic
Belt’ for land connectivity initially with Central Asia and a ‘21st century
Maritime Silk Road’ to connect China with ASEAN and, ultimately, with the
coastal cities of South Asia as well.
China’s actions have led to the revival
of the Northern Silk Road. Cities in inner provinces such as Kunming,
Chongqing, Chengdu, Xi’an and Xining have emerged as major metropolitan cities
with urban infrastructure projects paralleling those in coastal areas. China
has built an east–west railway line to connect far-flung cities like Urumqi and
Kashgar to Xi’an and the coastal cities. This railway line has been extended to
Moscow, using Central Asia as an economic corridor, and then on to Duisburg (in
Germany) to become the China–Europe railway line. East–west pipelines such as
the Kazakhstan–China and Central Asia–China pipelines have also been built.
In conjunction with India, which is
actively implementing its ‘Look East’ policy, China is building the BCIM
Economic Corridor to connect the Yunnan province of China with Myanmar,
Bangladesh and India. This is an important segment of the less well-known
Southern Silk Road.
In June this year, the Chinese
Ambassador to New Delhi, Wei Wei, proposed the establishment of a
‘Trans-Himalaya Economic Growth Region (THEGR)’ to promote the interconnection
and joint prosperity of China and India and neighbouring countries. As with
many such proposals from China, details are not known as yet. Nonetheless, the
proposal is welcome as it addresses an important missing link in connectivity
in the region.
It is expected that establishing new
economic corridors between India and China through Nepal would be one component
of the recent Chinese proposal. Another would be establishing India–China
connectivity through the Nathu La pass in Sikkim. Recently the Global Times
said that the extension of the Beijing–Lhasa railway to Shigaste, a Chinese
city close to the Nepal border, would open next month. It also mentioned that
the railway line would be extended by 2020 to two separate points, one on the
border of Nepal (Kerung) and the other on the border with India and Bhutan.
In a recent study prepared for the Asian
Development Bank (ADB), a colleague and I have proposed four multimodal
Trans-Himalayan Economic Corridors (THECs) beginning in New Delhi and Kolkota,
passing through Kathmandu and Tibet, with two turning east to Southeast Asia
and another two turning west to Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia. We have
also proposed that the BCIM project be expanded to
cover all of the South Asia Sub-regional Economic Cooperation countries,
including Nepal and Bhutan.
China’s THEGR proposal should focus on
the four of these economic corridors. Complemented by the three economic
corridors in the Greater Mekong Sub-region
and the six in Central Asia, these THECs would lead to a seamless Asian economy
extending all the way from Central Asia to South Asia and East Asia, lifting
growth for all.
Distances between major Indian cities
and the rapidly growing inner cities of China would be reduced by more than
half if land routes via Nepal can be used instead of the traditional sea route
via Hong Kong. While sea freight is the most cost effective way of moving goods
for bulky items, other, less bulky items, such as parts and components in
supply chain trade whose significance is growing rapidly, could be more cost
effectively transported by road or air.
Just as it did in the Greater Mekong
sub-region and in Central Asia, the Asian Development Bank should promote the
idea of the four THECs as a facilitator, financier, honest broker and technical
advisor. The THECs will have to be put together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.
Possible new sources of financing include the newly-established BRICS bank
and the soon-to-be-established Asian Infrastructure Investment Fund. Border
trade and cooperation between neighbouring districts/provinces of India, Nepal
and China should also be promoted since issues tend to be less tense at the
sub-national level than at the country level.
Pradumna B Rana is Associate Professor
at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang
Technological University (NTU), Singapore.
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