So when China, seemingly
overnight, introduces a rival MDB and appears to be making headway in attracting other Asian countries
to join, it’s not altogether surprising that the United States would
take to the press and through diplomatic channels to try to put the brakes on
it. In the name of seeking high standards around issues like environmental and
social safeguards, the United States is fundamentally in a scramble to head off
a loss of influence in Asia.
But as strategies for
maintaining influence go, this is a poor one. At best, it appears feckless,
with the United States standing on the sidelines shouting ‘no’. At worst, it
risks sending a negative message to the region: not only is the United States
unwilling to devote more of its own aid dollars to finance Asian infrastructure,
it doesn’t want Asian countries to do so either.
In this way, the US reaction
to AIIB marks the latest in a series of missteps that may very well assure a
loss of stature in the region. Fortunately, it’s not too late for a course
correction.
The United States can start
by accepting that key Asian allies are legitimately motivated to join the
Chinese in a new MDB. The United States can then look to those allies to work
with the Chinese to set appropriate standards for AIIB.
The harder work begins closer
to home, and specifically in the ADB, where the United States has direct
authority and influence. To the degree the AIIB reflects frustration with the
ADB on the part of China and others, in large part that frustration is related
to size.
There has been a steady
regional drumbeat for more ADB capital in recent years to help meet an
estimated US$8 trillion in Asian infrastructure needs. The United States has
responded to these calls with a decisive ‘no’. And not just no to more US money
in the ADB, but no to more of anybody’s money in the ADB. Sound familiar?
It’s time for the United
States to rethink that position. A good first step would be swift approval of
the pending financial restructuring
at the bank, which would generate significant additional capital for
infrastructure investment. Approval of the measure requires the assent of the
ADB’s 67 member governments — no easy task. The United States should deploy its
considerable diplomatic tools to secure approval for this positive initiative,
in contrast to the negative diplomacy that has defined the AIIB response.
Beyond that, the United
States should use the opportunity of the ADB restructuring to reconsider the
question of additional capital in the years ahead. As a result of the
restructuring, the bank will need far less grant support from donors like the
United States. Rather than simply pocketing all of this reduction as budgetary
savings, US policymakers should consider redeploying some of this money as
capital for infrastructure investment. The region would benefit from an ADB
capital increase, and the United States would still enjoy net budget savings.
That should be an appealing proposition at a time when the foreign assistance
budget is under some strain.
At the very least, if the
United States is unwilling or unable to participate in a future capital
increase for the ADB, it should not stand in the way of other shareholders’
desire to put more of their own resources in the bank.
Asian countries have made it
clear that they are eager to pool more public capital to meet the region’s
infrastructure needs, whether it happens at the ADB or in a new institution.
For the United States, the question is simple: do you want to lead that effort
at the ADB, or do you want China to lead it elsewhere?
Scott Morris is Senior
Associate at the Center for Global Development.
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