Published time: March 17, 2015 13:15
Edited time: March 19, 2015 06:44
Edited time: March 19, 2015 06:44
China's President Xi Jinping (3rd R) meets with the
guests at the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank launch ceremony at the Great
Hall of the People in Beijing October 24, 2014. (Reuters / Takaki Yajima /
Pool)
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France, Germany and Italy have confirmed they’ll join
China’s new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB). Participation in the
rival to the US-led World Bank is seen as a setback for the Obama
administration.
The three European countries on Tuesday confirmed in a
statement they intend "to become founding members of the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank," according to AFP.
"We want to bring our long experience... to help
the bank build a solid reputation," said German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble,
speaking also for Italy and France at a joint press conference with Chinese
Deputy-Premier Ma Kai on Tuesday in Berlin. He added that the three countries
want to make a contribution to the positive development of the Asian economy,
in which German companies were actively taking part.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei welcomed
the decision, saying "the AIIB is an open and inclusive
multilateral investment institution.”
"Participation by countries outside the region
will intensify the extensive representatives of the AIIB," he added.
The decision of the three European countries comes
after Britain last week became the first Western country to agree to become a
founding member of the AIIB, FT reports. The UK government said the decision
was in the country’s national interest, but it got a negative reaction from the
United States.
The new China-led bank is expected to challenge the
Washington-based World Bank, so the US is increasing pressure on its allies not
to join the institution. The US’ concern is that the new investment bank
might not have high standards of governance and environmental and social
safeguards.
The new bank is expected to challenge the Western
dominance of the US-led World Bank and IMF in global infrastructure projects,
which experts believe will create healthy competition.
“Our messaging to the Chinese consistently has been to
welcome investment in infrastructure but to seek unmistakable evidence that
this bank… takes as its starting point the high watermark of what other
multilateral development banks have done in terms of governance,” US Regional Assistant Secretary of
State Daniel Russel said in Seoul, the Financial Times reports.
Meanwhile, Chinese officials say the AIIB's operation
and governance will be open, transparent, inclusive and responsible.
"It will draw experience from other multilateral
development banks and avoid their detours so as to be more cost-effective and
efficient," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei was cited as saying by
Xinhua news agency. He also added that the bank “will complement
existing multilateral development banks and support the infrastructure and
economic development in Asia.”
The three major financial institutions – the IMF, the
World Bank and the Asia Development Bank will not be able to cope with the
tremendous amount of work that needs to be done, investment advisor at Motley
Fool David Kuo told RT.
“You shouldn’t politicize something like
infrastructure. People have a right to communication and a right to
uninterrupted power - these are all parts of the infrastructure projects that
many countries are crying out for,” Kuo said. He hopes that there will be a certain
amount of competition with the new China-led investment bank. Kuo suggests
Germany, France and Italy have much to offer the Asian people, as they can
bring expertise as well as money.
South Korea, Switzerland and Luxembourg were also
considering joining the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the Financial
Times reported.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said he would
make a final decision on AIIB membership soon. South Korea and other countries
are in discussions with China over possible participation.
China’s main regional rival Japan said earlier this
month that Asian countries including Japan have until March 31 to decide on
becoming AIIB founding members.
"They told us they are considering. Whether Japan
will join, we do not know. It is Japan's own decision,"Chinese Finance Minister Lou Jiwei said,
according to the Xinhua news agency.
Nearly 30 countries have confirmed their participation
in the AIIB, which is aimed at helping finance infrastructure projects across
Asia and is expected to come into being this year.
The AIIB was formally launched by Chinese President Xi
Jinping in 2014, and is expected to become a tool of a broader Chinese push for
growing international power and economic significance.
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