INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
China Offers Enhanced Cooperation as Russia Struggles
By Bloomberg News Dec 20, 2014 5:33 AM
GMT+0300

Source: TPG via Getty
Images
Chinese Premier Li
Keqiang, left, shakes hands with Russian Prime Minister Dmitry...
“To
help counteract an economic slowdown, China is ready to provide financial aid
to develop cooperation,” Premier Li Keqiang said at a Dec.
15 gathering in Astana, Kazakhstan. While the remark
applied to any of the five other nations represented at the meeting of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization group, it was directed at Russia, according
to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be named as the plans
weren’t public.
Any
rescue package for Russia would give China the opportunity of exercising the
kind of great-power leadership the U.S. has demonstrated for a century --
sustaining other economies with its superior financial resources. President Xi
Jinping last month called for China to adopt “big-country diplomacy” as he laid
out goals for elevating his nation’s status.
“If
the Kremlin decides to seek assistance from Beijing, it’s very unlikely for the
Xi leadership to turn it down,” said Cheng Yijun, senior researcher with the
Institute of Russian, Eastern European, Central Asian Studies at the Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences in Beijing. “This would be a
perfect opportunity to demonstrate China is a friend indeed, and also its big
power status.”
China
Ready
Russia
isn’t in talks with China about any financial aid, said Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for
President Vladimir Putin. He said he didn’t
know if China is preparing to offer aid. China’s Foreign Ministry, asked about
assisting Russia, said the country is ready to work with all members of the SCO
group to strengthen economic cooperation.
One-time
Cold War ally China already proved a help to its neighbor embroiled in tensions
with the U.S. and European Union earlier this year, signing a three-decade,
$400 billion deal to buy Russian gas.
Seeking
China’s support is one of Russia’s most realistic options, the state-run
Chinese newspaper Global Times wrote in a Dec. 17 editorial. A decision on
whether to use some of its windfall gains from falling oil prices to aid Russia
would hinge on whether Putin’s government is willing to ask for assistance,
said Cheng, who is also a research fellow at the Development Research Center,
which is a unit of the State Council, or cabinet.
Putin
Grit
The
two nations’ strategic partnership means that China would have to step in if
the ruble crisis deepens, Cheng said.
Putin
gave no indication he was entertaining the idea of asking for Chinese help. In
an annual press conference, he warned that his nation’s economic slump could
drag on for two years. Blaming the U.S. and Europe for the crisis,
he advised his central bank not to spend shrinking currency reserves to protect
the ruble, which has plunged 32 percent in the past two months against the
dollar.
Russia’s
currency weakened 2.3 percent this week even after the central bank raised its
keyinterest rate to 17 percent
from 10.5 percent.
IMF
Difficulty
While emerging markets facing such
situations typically can turn to the International Monetary
Fund for help, Russia’s impasse with Group of Seven
nations over the situation in Ukraine may make it difficult to find loan
conditions agreeable to all member countries, given that the U.S. and European
nations dominate the Washington-based lender.
Putin
in any case “would probably rather cut off an arm than negotiate a financial
support package” with nations whose sanctions helped fuel its crisis, William Hess, co-head of research
at New York-based PRC Macro Advisors Ltd., wrote in an e-mailed note Dec. 17.
Meantime,
Russia’s strategic importance to China means it may consider “bold steps” at a
time when few others are willing to help, he said. “This brings us back to
China and leaves Xi Jinping and China as Putin’s possible white knight.”
China
has used $25 billion of its foreign-exchange reserves to support oil supply
from a Sino-Russian pipeline, and another $67.3 billion to boost the supply of
crude oil from Russia, according to a statement on the central Chinese
government’s website posted this week. The statement didn’t specify what type
of support was provided or a time frame for the help, other than saying it was
since Li took office in March 2013.
Reserve
Strength
China’s
reserves -- the world’s largest -- stood at $3.89 trillion at the end of
September. Russia had $373.7 billion at the end of last month, according to
data compiled by Bloomberg.
At
the Astana gathering of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization this week, Li met
with Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. The group includes
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan along with Russia and China.
“China
is ready to take such measures bilaterally and with other members of the SCO
group,” Li said of his offer for help.
Faxed
questions to China’s State Council on a potential specific offer of aid went
unanswered. Asked whether China would offer support to Russia amid its crisis,
Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said that “we believe that Russia is
capable of surmounting the current temporary difficulty,” citing its currency
reserves, natural resources, industry and relatively low government debt.
’New’
Points
“We
are ready to work with all SCO members to step up economic cooperation, promote
economic restructuring and upgrade, and explore new growth points of
cooperation so as to achieve common development and stability,” the spokesman
said, according to a transcript of the briefing.
Russia’s
currency-swap deal with China is one potential avenue of help, said Arthur
Kroeber, Beijing-based managing director of economic research firm Gavekal
Dragonomics. The agreement on a three-year 150 billion yuan ($24 billion)
local-currency swap was one of the accords reached between Putin and Xi in
October.
“China
values Russia as a strategic counterweight to the U.S. and so has no interest
in a Russia implosion,” Kroeber wrote in an e-mailed response to questions.
Kroeber said that low risk of a Russia collapse means that “Chinese assistance
other than maybe a bit of discreet buying of ruble assets” is “not that
necessary.”
China,
the world’s largest oil importer, has emerged as one of the biggest winners
from the slump in the fuel’s price that has hammered its northern neighbor. A
30 percent drop in the price of oil alone could add 0.3 to 0.5 percentage point
to China’s growth, says Mizuho Bank Ltd.
Russia’s
crisis is a double-edged sword for China, said Wang Haiyun, a former Chinese
military attaché to Russia and a senior consultant to the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization.
“If
China gets involved too much it would risk being dragged into the crisis
itself,” Wang said. “China could offer to bail out Russia but at the same time
it has to watch out for any potential risks.”
Read
more at: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-19/did-china-float-a-bailout-offer-for-crisis-hit-russia-.html
No comments:
Post a Comment