Italy joins China's New Silk Road project

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands after signing trade agreements at Villa Madama in Rome,Image copyright
Reuters

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There was long applause as the two leaders met to witness the signature of the deals

Italy has become the first developed economy to sign up to China’s global investment programme which has raised concerns among Italy’s Western allies.

A total of 29 deals amounting to €7bn ($8bn; £6bn) were signed during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Rome.

The project is seen as a new Silk Road which, just like the ancient trade route, aims to link China to Europe.

Italy’s European Union allies and the United States have expressed concern at China’s growing influence.

What is the Chinese project about?

The new Silk Road has another name – the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) – and it involves a wave of Chinese funding for major infrastructure projects around the world, in a bid to speed Chinese goods to markets further afield. Critics see it as also representing a bold bid for geo-political and strategic influence.

It has already funded trains, roads, and ports, with Chinese construction firms given lucrative contracts to connect ports and cities – funded by loans from Chinese banks.

The levels of debt owed by African and South Asian nations to China have raised concerns in the West and among citizens – but roads and railways have been built that would not exist otherwise:

  • In Uganda, Chinese millions built a 50km (30 mile) road to the international airport
  • In Tanzania, a small coastal town may become the continent’s largest port
  • In Europe too, Chinese firms managed to buy 51% of the port authority in Piraeus port near Athens in 2016, after years of economic crisis in Greece

What projects were signed in Rome?

On behalf of Italy, Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio, leader of the populist Five Star Movement, signed the umbrella deal making Italy formally part of the Economic Silk Road and The Initiative for a Maritime Silk Road for the 21st Century.

Ministers then signed deals over energy, finance, and agricultural produce, followed by the heads of big Italian gas and energy, shipbuilding and engineering firms – which will be offered entry into the Chinese market.

China’s Communications and Construction Company will be given access to the port of Trieste to enable links to central and eastern Europe. The Chinese will also be involved in developing the port of Genoa.

What’s in it for Italy?

Italy is the first member of the G7 group of developed world economies to take money offered by China.

It is one of the world’s top 10 largest economies – yet Rome finds itself in a curious situation.

The collapse of the Genoa bridge in August killed dozens of people and made Italy’s crumbling infrastructure a major political issue for the first time in decades.

And Italy’s economy is far from booming.

The country slipped into recession at the end of 2018, and its national debt levels are among the highest in the eurozone. Italy’s populist government came to power in June 2018 with high-spending plans but had to peg them back after a stand-off with the EU.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte hailed the deals.

“Italy and China should develop more efficient ties and build better relations,” Mr Conte said at the signing ceremony.

There is, however, dissent within his government. Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, who heads the right-wing League, was conspicuously absent from all official ceremonies.

Mr Salvini has warned that he does not want to see foreign businesses “colonising” Italy.

“Before allowing someone to invest in the ports of Trieste or Genoa, I would think about it not once but a hundred times,” Mr Salvini warned.

What’s in it for China?

Italy’s move is “largely symbolic”, according to Peter Frankopan, professor of Global History at Oxford University and a writer on The Silk Roads.

But even Rome admitting the BRI is worth exploring “has a value for Beijing”, he said.

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Media captionWhat China’s One Belt, One Road really means

“It adds gloss to the existing scheme and also shows that China has an important global role.”

“The seemingly innocuous move comes at a sensitive time for Europe and the European Union, where there is suddenly a great deal of trepidation not only about China, but about working out how Europe or the EU should adapt and react to a changing world,” Prof Frankopan told the BBC.

“But there is more at stake here too,” he added. “If investment does not come from China to build ports, refineries, railway lines and so on, then where will it come from?”

  • Grappling with China’s growing power

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Oxford Science Archive/Getty Imag

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Explorer Marco Polo’s travels along the Silk Road were immortalised in the “Book of Marvels”

The “made in Italy” label carries a reputation for quality worldwide, and is legally protected for products items processed “mainly” in Italy.

In recent years, Chinese factories based in Italy using Chinese labour have been challenging that mark of quality.

Better connections for cheap raw materials from China – and the return of finished products from Italy – could exaggerate that practice.

‘Predatory’ investment

The agreements signed in Rome come amid questions over whether Chinese firm Huawei should be permitted to build essential communications networks – after the United States expressed concern they could help Beijing spy on the West.

That was not part of the negotiations in Italy.

But a little over a week before the deal was due to be signed, the European Commission released a joint statement on “China’s growing economic power and political influence” and the need to “review” relations.

As President Xi toured Rome, EU leaders in Brussels considered their approach for relations with China.

“Our aim is to focus on achieving a balanced relation, which ensures fair competition and equal market access,” Donald Tusk, President of the European Council, said.

In March, US National Security Council spokesman Garrett Marquis pointed out that Italy was a major economy and did not need to “lend legitimacy to China’s vanity infrastructure project”.

Setting the scene

Italian officials have been keen to point out that the deal they signed is not an international treaty, and is non-binding.

Other European nations already accept Chinese investment through something called the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, he said – something the UK was the first to sign up to.

“And then one by one, France, Germany, Italy and everyone else also followed suit,” Italy’s undersecretary of state for trade and investment, Michele Geraci, says.

Similarly, he believes Italy’s neighbours will soon follow it into the Belt and Road initiative.

“I do believe that this time Italy is actually leading Europe – which I understand may be a surprise to most,” he added.

source: bbc.com