HomeNewsOpinionChina’s Belt and Road shows the high price of Beijing’s money

China’s Belt and Road shows the high price of Beijing’s money

The Whoosh bullet train is a signature BRI project reducing travel time from Jakarta to Bandung from 3 hours to about 40 minutes. But construction got mired in delays and profitability remains a big question. Jakarta is increasingly pushing back against Beijing, insisting that China Railway transfer its technology so that it can produce the trains domestically

October 03, 2023 / 09:40 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
China BRI
A bullet train in Laos constructed with the help of the BRI. (Source: Bloomberg)

Birthdays are in equal parts celebratory but also inherently tinged with regret, for opportunities missed and mistakes made. All of which may well be weighing on Beijing as its Belt and Road Initiative marks its 10th anniversary this year. For the most part, it has been a success, coinciding with a coming of age for China’s financial and political importance on the global stage. But the next 10 years are unlikely to be as prosperous or smooth. The external geopolitical environment, combined with the nation’s domestic challenges, will make the BRI, as it is known, far less prominent than it has been.

Called the “project of the century” and “China’s Marshall Plan, but bolder,” the BRI’s vision was articulated during a speech in Kazakhstan in 2013 by President Xi Jinping. He evoked a golden era of trade and friendship between the Chinese and the rest of Central Asia, proclaiming that “a near neighbor is better than a distant relative.”

Story continues below Advertisement

Xi repeated that sentiment in a follow-up speech in Jakarta later that year, reminding people of when Beijing had stepped up to assist in the aftermath of the Aceh tsunami in 2004. Highlighting China’s new age of benevolence and generosity, Xi’s pitch was to convince emerging Asian giants like Indonesia that siding with China made economic sense. The strategy paid off: to date 147 countries, worth about 40 percent of global GDP, have signed on to BRI projects or expressed interest in them.

Indonesia is one. This week, Jakarta announced the completion of its China-backed project — the Whoosh bullet train that will connect the capital to Bandung in West Java, reducing travel time from three hours to about 40 minutes. On paper, this is the ideal BRI project, but it has already been mired in delays and rising costs — highlighting the issues when Beijing’s money is attached to a deal.