CPEC and Pakistan

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CPEC and Pakistan

1. Introduction
China Pakistan relationship during the past sixty-five years achieved many landmarks; starting
with the signing of bilateral trade agreement in 1963, followed by construction of Karakoram
highway and having cooperation in diverse fields including energy and defence related
industries. CPEC is the vision of the leadership of both countries for transforming this
relationship to strategic economic cooperation and contours of CPEC came to the limelight in
July 2013. CPEC will take the China Pakistan relationship to new heights. CPEC is of great
value to both China and Pakistan. This framework of regional connectivity will open up west
China to south and contribute to ‘One Belt One Road’ initiative policy. The establishment of
communication networks from Kashghar (China) to Gwadar (Pakistan) has been agreed mutually
to be completed by 20130 in phases. Chinese capital, technology and capacity to operate large
number of transport infrastructure (highways/ railways) projects will play its supporting role to
shape the enabling environment for an open economic system. CPEC will not only benefit China
and Pakistan but will have positive impact on Iran, Afghanistan, India, Central Asian Republic,
and the region. Pakistan sees CPEC as the driving force to boost its economic growth
significantly. Pakistan desires to use this opportunity to remove the bottlenecks to its economic
development. CPEC is envisioned as corridor of peace and development. The phase of planning,
construction and operation of China Pakistan Economic Corridor, though is challenging but has
significant potentials of promising future.
The visit of President Xi Jinping in April 2015 and Chinese commitment of US $ 46 Billion for
various project of CPEC, drew the world attention to this new development. It was stated that
CPEC will contribute to success of both Pakistan and China and with promising future for the
region/world. Practices in the past five years have proved that the CPEC construct is not
targeted at specific regions or groups, but is aimed at the whole country of Pakistan and
benefits all the people of Pakistan.
Since last year, the environment for investment is continuously improving and implementation of
CPEC projects has started. The issues are continuously being addressed to achieve new
milestones of progress. Most international agencies have expressed positive progression of
Pakistan in the last year.

2 Fruitful achievements in CPEC construction


CPEC has played a flagship leading and demonstration role in the Belt and Road construction. It
has become a platform for all-round pragmatic cooperation between China and Pakistan.

2.1 Improving macroeconomic conditions in Pakistan:


CPEC has driven the development of Pakistan. CPEC has solved the problem of limited
investment capacity caused by insufficient savings and shortage of foreign exchange in Pakistan
and provided a high-quality source of impetus for Pakistan’s economic development.
As of January 2019, CPEC included nine completed early harvest projects and 13 projects under
construction, with a total investment of $19 billion. It drove Pakistan’s economic growth by one
to two percentage points every year and created 70,000 jobs in Pakistan.

2.2 Alleviating Pakistan’s energy shortage


Energy shortage is a hard nut to crack that restricts the economic development of Pakistan. It is a
problem that previous Pakistani governments attached great importance to and most wanted to
solve. The electricity gap cost Pakistan an annual average loss of $13.5 billion in GDP,
according to a study by PwC in 2012. Power shortage left Pakistan in the dark for a long time,
with rolling blackouts across the country lasting about 10 hours a day in major cities and up to 22
hours in rural areas. CPEC has regarded the alleviation of energy shortage in Pakistan as one of
the important areas of construction since its launch.

2.2 Improving infrastructure connectivity in Pakistan


The China Pakistan cross-border economic belt, linked by the China-Pakistan Karakoram
Highway, has taken shape under CPEC. Through international logistics nodes such as Gwadar
Port, Karachi and Peshawar, Pakistan serves to transport products from western China to
countries in the Middle East and the Indian Ocean via transit transport. Therefore, infrastructure
connectivity is also one of the important areas in the early harvest projects of CPEC.

3. Gwadar Port on the fast track


Gwadar Port has taken on a new look in the past five years. The port roads, storage yards,
loading and unloading equipment, seawater desalination, oil supply and port monitoring facilities
have been further improved. The Gwadar-Middle East Express was opened, connecting Gwadar
with other major ports in the world. The Gwadar Port Free Trade Zone covers an area of 923
hectares and is constructed in four phases in two zones, one north and one south. On January 28,
2018, the Gwadar Free Zone Phase 1 was formally completed and put into operation, and the
investment attraction was also completed simultaneously. More than 30 Chinese and Pakistani
enterprises, including hospitality, banking, insurance, financial leasing, logistics, overseas
warehousing, grain and oil processing, fishery processing and home appliance assembly, started
working at the free zone.
4. Cross-border fibre optic project completed and opened
The 820-km China-Pakistan Cross-Border Fibre Optic Project, which is laid between the city of
Rawalpind, Pakistan in the south and the Khunjerab Pass, China in the north, was completed and
opened on July 13, 2018.

5. Promising future of CPEC construction


2018 was an election year for Pakistan, when there was concern at home and abroad about
whether
Pakistan’s attitude towards CPEC would change due to the change of government. Around the
same time, there were some international opinions questioning CPEC, saying that a large amount
of Chinese loans might plunge Pakistan into debt crisis. Facts over the past year have proved that
the determination to build CPEC has not been shaken by the change of government in Pakistan
and the debt crisis theory has been in tatters. In promoting the CPEC construction, China has
always followed the principle of consultation, contribution and shared benefits, and given top
priority to Pakistan’s economic development and the vital interests of the Pakistani. Based on
Pakistan’s future economic and social development priorities and people’s needs, the future
development path and cooperation direction of CPEC will be determined through consultation,
with priority given to accelerating cooperation in industries, parks and agriculture, creating jobs,
and improving people’s livelihood.

5.1 Steadfast determination to build CPEC


At the very beginning of the new Pakistani government, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood
Qureshi said, “The new Pakistani government is advancing an ambitious reform agenda, and is
willing to learn from China’s experience in economic development, poverty alleviation, disaster
reduction, anti-corruption, and environmental protection. Advancing CPEC is our top priority.”
From November 2 to 5, 2018, Prime Minister Imran Khan made his first official visit to China
and attended the first China International Import Expo in Shanghai. During his visit, the two
countries reached important agreement and signed a joint statement on further strengthening
China-Pakistan all-weather strategic cooperative partnership and building a closer China
Pakistan community of shared future in the new era. Prime Minister Imran made it clear that the
completed projects of CPEC are in the interest of Pakistan and will bring enormous social and
economic development opportunities to the Pakistani people.

5.2 Fallacy of smearing CPEC debunked


Since the beginning of CPEC, rumours discrediting the project has been rampant. Some with
hidden reasons blame the mega project of impairing Pakistan’s economic risks and claim that the
country is falling into a “debt trap.” The proportion of CPEC is very low in the foreign debt
structure data released by the Pakistani government, which is not the cause of the debt problem
of Pakistan at all. More than 80% of the CPEC projects are funded by Chinese direct investment
or use Chinese free assistance, while less than 20% use Chinese loans. “Instead of burdening
Pakistan, CPEC has helped to boost its economy.” In the next stage of CPEC development,
cooperation will be strengthened with focus on people’s livelihood. China will give more
assistance to Pakistan in areas such as agriculture, education, medical care and drinking water.

5.3 Clear significances of CPEC cooperation


As the CPEC construction is advancing, Pakistan’s energy problem has been lessened
dramatically, and the improvement in transportation infrastructure has laid a foundation for the
industrial upgrading of Pakistan. Industrial cooperation will be the focus of the CPEC
construction and development in the next stage, which will inject new impetus into the
sustainable development of CPEC. PM Imran noted that CPEC offers a “golden opportunity” for
Pakistan to revitalize its economy and achieve development. The fundamental reason is that
CPEC can significantly enhance the overall competitiveness of Pakistan. The new Pakistani
government attaches great importance to the development of people’s livelihood and aims to
shape Pakistan into a just welfare state. CPEC, consistent with the local situation, has
particularly given priority to benefiting the people. Energy projects have been completed to meet
the needs of approximately 8.6 million households. The primary schools and China Pakistan
medical centers near Gwadar have improved the education and medical conditions of the local
people. In the future, the two countries are expected to sign a series of agreements covering areas
related to people’s livelihood, including education, health, agriculture, water for irrigation,
poverty alleviation, and human resources development. Hospitals have been set up in Khyber-
Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, and vocational and technical training colleges have been
established throughout Pakistan.

New challenges to CPEC construction


Currently, CPEC construction has gradually shifted from energy and transportation infrastructure
cooperation to industrial cooperation and industrial park construction. PM Imran has given
prominence to promoting industrialization and employment in Pakistan, and laid greater
emphasis on the western route of CPEC. Meanwhile, the international situation has also changed.
Given the overall situation, we should be clear that old challenges have not yet subsided and new
ones are emerging in the CPEC construction.
First, the complex international political situation, especially the interference of external factors
on CPEC, cannot be ignored.
Second, Pakistan has a serious economic shortage, a huge foreign debt and a heavy debt service
burden. The capacity to provide supporting funds for CPEC construction has declined sharply
and it is no longer feasible to expand infrastructure construction. Pakistan’s new government
wants to rein in huge capital spending, especially on projects that require large amounts of
foreign exchange.
Third, the overall security situation in Pakistan has improved year by year, but terrorist attacks
still
occur frequently. Over the past year, violent and terrorist attacks launched by Balochistan
separatists occurred frequently, with changes in form, geographical expansion and new features,
and the threat to Gwadar Port and CPEC has increased.
Despite many challenges to the CPEC construction, it is the internal factors that are the root
cause
affecting the CPEC construction. When we realise and successfully eliminate the internal
negative
factors, external factors cannot really affect the process of CPEC construction.

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