The new Silk Road is China's 'second pillar of legitimacy' — and Europe is starting to buy in

Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte shake their hands at the end of the signing ceremony of a memorandum of understanding at Rome's Villa Madama, Saturday, March 23, 2019. Jinping is in Italy to sign a memorandum of understanding to make Italy the first Group of Seven leading democracies to join China's ambitious Belt and Road infrastructure project. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte shake their hands at the end of the signing ceremony of a memorandum of understanding at Rome's Villa Madama, Saturday, March 23, 2019. (Photo credit: AP/Andrew Medichini)

China is undertaking a colossal project called the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which involves pushing billions of dollars into various economies in Asia and Europe through opaque loans to expand influence around the world.

The BRI — also known as the New Silk Road — is envisioned as a revival of an ancient trade route between China and Europe. According to one expert, the project stems from China’s desire to build a “second pillar of legitimacy.”

The project has taken on new significance, with Italy signing a memorandum of understanding with China this week. The country, despite heated opposition from fellow European Union (EU) member states and the U.S., inked deals with China that are expected to increase to $22.6 billion in the future.

Luxembourg followed by signing an agreement with China to develop BRI projects, but details were scarce.

‘The second pillar of legitimacy’

The map here from July 2018 shows railroad, pipeline and port projects across Asia. China has been ramping up deals with many more countries, the latest being Italy which is not seen on this map. (Source: MERICS)
The map here from July 2018 shows railroad, pipeline and port projects across Asia. China has been ramping up deals with many more countries, the latest being Italy and Luxembourg. (Source: MERICS)

China’s big push with the New Silk Road was born out of fears over waning economic growth, according to Thomas Eder, a research associate at German think-tank Mercator Institute for China Studies.

“It’s been almost a cliche that the Chinese government is legitimate as long as there is 7.5% growth,” Eder told Yahoo Finance. “So [it] didn’t have that anymore. But they’re building up the second pillar of legitimacy with this collection of foreign policy successes, prestige, influence ... worldwide.”

China has seen its GDP grow each year at a rate of more than 7.5% from 1991 to 2013, before it began to report lower than 7% growth starting in 2015, according to World Bank data. Amid the slowing growth, the BRI provides “a political win for China,” Eder said. “It delivers more prestige to the Chinese government.”

And according to Peking University law professor He Weifang, the BRI serves a domestic purpose as well.

“The economy is the only tool for the Communist Party to win the people’s support,” Weifang told South China Morning Post. “However, the government has been prioritizng ideological control rather than economic development, which doesn’t and won’t work.”

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A view of BRI projects in Europe. (Source: MERICS/Yahoo Finance)

Debt-trap diplomacy

As part of the build-up of the new Silk Road, China has loaned billions of dollars through various financial institutions — such as the Chinese Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China — which enjoy “very low borrowing costs … allowing them to lend cheaply to Chinese companies working on BRI projects,” the Center for Strategic and International Studies stated.

Eder highlighted that many of these projects were largely shouldered by the Chinese where 85% of the loan would be financed by a Chinese bank, versus a 15% share taken on by the local government. Furthermore, contracts and tenders were often won by Chinese companies through a non-competitive process.