Patient Capital in the context of Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and MDBs

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Patient Capital in the context of Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and MDBs Dr. Yan WANG Centre for New Structural Economics Peking University, China Nov 9 2017 wangyan@nsd.pku.edu.cn ywang2005b@gmail.com 1

Outline I. China s approach in South-South Cooperation: combining trade, aid and investment II. What is patient capital? III. MDBs and NDBs can utilize Patient Capital to finance Infrastructure and Private Sector IV. SWF, Strategic Investment funds, Silk Road Funds are all providers of Patient Capital V. Please incorporate South-South Cooperation and new development banks/funds/ Belt Road Initiative (BRI) in the final documents for FfD 2

I. China s Approach in SSDC: trade, aid and investment China combines trade, aid and investment in South-South Dev Cooperation (SSDC) China s aid is not altruistic. The government never considers aid as one sided alms, but something mutual. Do what they know best, following their comparative advantage in providing South-South Dev. Cooperation (SSDC) Teach fishing rather than giving fish, following China s own experience and building 6 Special Econ Zones in Africa. Example below 3

China s ODA: small, with huge potential 4 Source: Yan Wang 2011. page 22. Updated by Aidflow using 2014 data, Oct 2015.

Southern partners can use 3 Comparative Advantages Utilizing comparative advantage (CA, a trade concept) to help each other First, China has comparative advantages in building infrastructure: e.g. hydro-power, highways, and high-speed railways Second, China has comparative advantage (CA) in 45 out of 97 subsectors in trading goods Third, emerging economies have high savings and Patient Capital, which could be a comp advantage to be utilized 5

II. Utilizing Patient Capital What is patient capital? Patient capital: those capitals to be invested in a relationship in which the stakeholder/partner is willing to take a stake in the host country s development, aiming for a win-win. Countries with Long Term Orientation (Hofstede, 1990, 2010) are with patient capital. They are equity-like investors but willing to sink money in the real sector or unlisted projects for a long time as long as 10 years and above. And they are willing and better able to take risks. Net Foreign Asset is positively and significantly associated with Long Term Orientation index. On the other hand, countries with Short Term Orientation and low savings rates would see their Net Foreign Asset positions deteriorating and 6 their foreign debt mounting. (Lin and Wang 2017b)

II. Patient Capital (ultra-long term) from China and other EM Source: Lin and Wang 2017b. 7

Patient capital 1: Net suppliers of FDI Outflows minus inflows 200000 Net Suppliers of FDI to the World: Outflows minus inflows, 1990-2015 150000 100000 50000 0-50000 -100000-150000 China Germany Korea, Republic of China, Taiwan Province of Japan Russian Federation United States Source: Lin and Wang 2017b. Calculated based on UNCTAD data. 8

Patient capital 2: Cross-Border M&A Purchases, Net Value of Cross-Border M&A Purchases, Net, Millions of 200 000.0 dollars, 2000-2015 150 000.0 100 000.0 50 000.0 - - 50 000.0 Germany United States Japan China Korea, Republic of Singapore Source: Lin and Wang 2017b, based on UNCTAD data. 9

III. Future Prospect in Dev Financing ODA (official development aid) will decline in relative importance in the next decades; But OOF and OOF-like loans will grow. MDBs accounts for only 1% of global inv on infrastructure (Dollar 2016). They need to better utilize patient capital Setting up more Multilateral Investment Banks/Funds Expand the definitions of ODA, OOF, OOF-like loans (blended, like AIIB, CDB, EXIM bank), and OOF-like investments (Silk Road Fund, SIFs, and SWF, pension funds, other new funds). UNCTAD recognizes the roles of National Development Banks and it is ahead of the curve. WB is late here. IFC new study on leveraging trillions for Green Dev 10

Projection of Global Investment 2015-2030 SHARES OF GLOBAL INVESTMENT, % 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% TREND OF GLOBAL SHARES OF INVESTMENT share of developed countries share of developing countries without China share of developing countries with China 11

The Belt and Road: But how to finance it? 12

New commitments by China China initiates the AIIB in 2013 and is a founding country for NDB Set up a sustainable development fund of $2 billion at UN China has set up a $2 billion fund for South-South Cooperation. In the FOCAC meeting in South Africa, Xi committed to support Africa transformation by $60 billion dollars in three years, consisting, grants, no interest loans, concessional and nonconcessional loans China has set up a industrial capacity cooperation fund with a $2 billion dollars The Belt and Road Initiative is a large platform for co-investment (BRI), see Xi Jinping s speech May 2017. How to finance the BRI: Wide Consultation ( 共商 ); Joint Construction ( 共建 ); and Shared benefits ( 共享 ) 13

Win-Win for all 3 types of Economies The WCWE train is twice as fast as seaborne transport, but only half as expensive as airfreight, said Boecker. Source: Lin and Yan Wang 2014 on Kazakhstan. 14

IV. Patient Capital: Outward FDI (OFDI) from BRICKS 200.0 Outward Foreign Direct Investment Flows (2000-2016) Source: UNCTAD Statistics on FDI #1 China, 183.1 (World Rank #2) FDI Outflows (in billions US dollars) 150.0 100.0 50.0 0.0 #2 Russian Federation, 27.3 #2 Korea, Republic of, 27.3 #4 India, 5.1 #5 South Africa, 3.4 #6 Brazil, -12.4-50.0 China Russian Federation Korea, Republic of India South Africa Brazil Source: UNCTAD data. China s OFDI reached $183 bn in 2016 surging up 44%. 15

Chinese Firms Creating Jobs Overseas Huajian Shoes: A Quick Win in Ethiopia Former PM Meles Zenawi went to China in March 2011 Huajian decided to make the investment in October 2011 and recruited 86 local workers to be trained in China. In 4 months, export started in March 2012. Huajian became profitable in October 2012. Huajian employed 3,500 workers by the end of 2013. See McKinsey June 2017: Millions jobs have been created by Chinese firms in Africa 16

Our New Book Cambridge University Press 17

Conclusions MDBs can continue to play important roles in transformation, if they 1) combine trade, aid, and investment like China does; and 2) Utilize Patient capital with long term orientation, suitable for enhancing global connectivity for global value chains. The WBG s new private sector window using IDA (managed by IFC) is a good way forward. China is moving to a new multilateralism with new banks and funds. China is learning to become a responsible stakeholder in global affairs by supporting FfD via the New Dev Bank and AIIB and SRF, and more SIF/funds The Belt & Road initiative is a platform for coinvestment, will create opportunities for all countries, It 18 is a win-win-win multilateral initiative.

References: Lin, Justin Yifu, New Structural Economics, 2010. Lin, Justin Yifu. Against the Consensus: Reflections on the Great Recession, Cambridge University Press, 2013. Lin, Justin Yifu and Yan Wang. UNU-WIDER working paper 2014/046. Lin, Justin Yifu and Yan Wang, 2015 Lin, Justin Yifu and Yan Wang, 2017. Going Beyond Aid: Dev Cooperation for Structural Transformation, Cambridge University Press. Lin, Justin Yifu and Yan Wang. 2017b. New Structural Economics: Patient Capital as a comparative advantage, in Journal of Infrastructure, Policy and Development, Vol. 1, No.1. http://systems.enpress-publisher.com/index.php/jipd/article/view/28 19