China – Latin America Database 2017
The Inter-American Dialogue’s China and Latin America program and Boston University’s Global Economic Governance Initiative (GEGI) estimate that China Development Bank and China Eximbank issued approximately $21 billion in loans to LAC governments and state-owned firms in 2016. This report highlights some of the primary features of Chinese lending over the past year.
Information on the various loans issued to Latin American governments and state-owned firms from 2005 to the present is available in the newly-updated Dialogue-GEGI China-Latin America Finance Database.
To access the database click here
Our findings include the following:
- The year 2016 was the third highest on record for Chinese state-to-state finance in Latin America. Many of these deals were announced during high-level meetings between Chinese and Latin American leaders.
- In 2016, Chinese finance to Latin America surpassed the World Bank’s and the Inter-American Development Bank’s individual lending to the region.
- China continues to be an important source of finance for those countries in LAC (e.g., Venezuela and Ecuador) with more limited access to global capital markets.
- Brazil, Ecuador, and Venezuela accounted for 92 percent of total lending to the region in 2016, with approximately 72 percent—or $15.2 billion—issued to Brazil alone. National oil company Petrobras received the vast majority of Brazil’s share, despite being immersed in a sprawling corruption scandal.
- Bolivia also received considerable attention from Chinese policy banks in both 2015 and 2016. China announced a $7 billion credit line to Bolivia in 2015, which was extended to $10 billion in 2016. In addition, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi promised the delivery of $4.8 billion in mostly infrastructure projects during his October 2016 visit to the Andean nation.
- Chinese banks continue to focus on LAC’s extractive and infrastructure sectors. From 2005 to the present, Chinese policy banks financed $24 billion in infrastructure projects (e.g., highway and facility construction), as well as approximately $100 billion in energy projects, some of which involved energy infrastructure development.
- As China’s financial sector grows, a wider range of lenders is issuing finance in LAC. In addition to policy bank lending, China’s commercial banks are increasingly active in Latin America and other regions, often in cooperation with other international banks. China’s three regional funds, announced during high-level visits to the region in 2014 and 2015, are also slowly beginning to result in new projects.
The China-Latin America Finance Database is a product of collaboration between the Inter-American Dialogue and the Global Economic Governance Initiative (GEGI) at Boston University.
Source: Gallagher, Kevin P. and Margaret Myers (2017) “China-Latin America Finance Database,” Washington: Inter-American Dialogue.
To access the report click here