Commentary
China’s international development bank, patterned after the World Bank based in Washington, gives Beijing influence over the bank’s 110 member states and anyone else lured by a piece of the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) largesse.
The United States had enough sense not to join directly when the bank—called the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and headquartered in Beijing—was founded in 2016. But U.S. taxpayer dollars are commingled with AIIB loans through co-financing with the World Bank and other loans funded by U.S. taxpayers. In those cases, Beijing is leveraging the hard-earned income of U.S. families for its own purposes.
The CCP dominates the AIIB through the regime’s 27 percent share of AIIB votes. That is enough, along with the votes of its partners, to control the bank and promote CCP goals like the displacement of the U.S. dollar as an international currency. This is partly why it wants to issue panda bonds in yuan to countries like Egypt. Plus, Cairo knows that it is less likely to get these loans and guarantees from Beijing if it allows criticism of the genocide against the Uyghurs, for example. So Cairo is silent and takes the money, and Beijing’s global influence grows despite its human rights abuses.
While helping relatively impoverished countries around the world is a good thing, there are better ways to do so than through entities like the World Bank, AIIB, ADB, or AfDB that cooperate with the CCP. Given the CCP’s growing global influence, taxpayers in the United States and our allies need to be much more careful about how our international development assistance is used, diluted, or, in the worst case, hijacked against U.S. interests and American values like democracy. Japanese, European, and British taxpayers should do the same.
The United States, our allies, and the international development banks we support should cancel all forms of cooperation with Beijing, including any co-financing with the AIIB. Any funds that have been granted or promised to the AIIB should be recalled in a full divestment from the institution. We must recognize that the CCP has set itself against democracy and human rights, as well as against the United States and our allies, including major contributors to international development like Japan, Europe, and the United Kingdom. Until China democratizes and again begins to observe human rights, the world should stop funding international development banks that cooperate with the CCP.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Source link
Add comment