The Africa-China relationship: challenges and opportunities |
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Authors: | Paul Tiyambe Zeleza |
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Affiliation: | 1. Vice-President of Academic Affairs and Professor of History, Quinnipiac University, Hamden, Connecticut, USpaul.zeleza@quinnipiac.edu |
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Abstract: | The dramatic growth in the relationship between Africa and China is one of the great stories of the twenty-first century, part of the profound transformations taking place in the global political economy. It has been greeted with excitement, consternation, and confusion. To its cheerleaders, it represents the enduring partnership between Africa and China, spawned by the historical affinities of struggles against Western imperialism and humanistic aspirations for development. To its critics, it is reminiscent of European colonisation a century earlier, in which Africa serves as a cheap source of raw materials, a lucrative export market for Chinese manufactured goods, and an outlet for its surplus capital. Rather than a development partner, some see China as Africa's biggest development competitor, whose explosive growth and insatiable quest for global markets threatens Africa's industrialisation and competitiveness. This paper examines the factors behind the development of Africa-China relations, especially its economic magnitude, and the challenges and opportunities it offers both regions. |
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Keywords: | China-Africa relations South-South relations African economic development international trade Chinese investment Africa and the BRICS role of Chinese and African diasporas |
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