Beyond the small businesses that
attract Africans in Guangzhou—the so-called 'Chocolate city' in China
because of the large number of Africans who live there—African companies
have made considerable investments in China.
China, the
world's newest economic superpower, surpassed the United States as
Africa's largest trading partner in 2009. Since then, China's
investments in Africa have been growing at a staggering speed.
But many people are not aware that the Sino-Africa relationship is not just a one-way street.
By 2012, Africans had invested a cumulative $14.2 billion in China, a 43% increase from the $9.9 billion invested by 2009.
In
2012 alone, the amount of direct investments from Africa to China was
about $1.4 billion, mostly in petro-chemical, manufacturing, wholesale
and retailing industries.
Some of the top African investors in
China came from Mauritius, South Africa, Seychelles and Nigeria,
according to the White Paper on Economic and Trade Cooperation between
China and Africa published by the Chinese government.
Investing in local brands
For
example, not many people outside China have heard about Snow beer, the
world's best-selling beer by sales volume, because it is produced and
sold only in China.
Even fewer are aware that an African company,
the South African Breweries (SABMiller), runs Snow beer as a joint
venture with a Chinese firm and produces many other popular Chinese beer
brands as well.
SABMiller (formerly SAB before it acquired the Miller Brewing Company in 2002) began its expansion into China in the mid-1990s.
Its
first move was to negotiate with the government-backed China Resources
Enterprises, for joint ownership of China Resources Snow Breweries,
which is now the largest brewery in China.
While most foreign
breweries struggle to sell their brands in the Chinese market, SABMiller
has concentrated on purchasing local Chinese breweries.
SABMiller's
winning strategy is to keep on purchasing shares in local brewers and
investing in the production of popular Chinese brands without involving
itself in daily operations and management of the companies.
Today,
30 years after its first investments, SABMiller co-owns more than 90
breweries with Chinese Resources, producing around 30 beer brands with a
23% market share.
Tunisia's investment in China's fertilizer production has an even longer history.
Initially
launched as a key project of China's 8th Five-Year Plan, the Sino-Arab
Chemical Fertilizers Company (SACF) was a joint initiative reached by
Tunisia and China when Tunisia's late Prime Minister Mohammed Mzali
visited Beijing in 1984.
SACF wisely used the continuous
investments in its technical reform and facility expansion in the new
millennium, which significantly increased its production and quality
control capacities.
Widely praised as a successful South-South
Cooperation model, the company has grown to become one of the largest
compound fertilizer producers in China.
Despite the global
recession that jeopardized most countries' investment plans, the amount
of direct investments from Seychelles to China reached the $100 million
mark in 2009, compared to $7 million worth of Chinese investments in
Seychelles during the same period.
The large number of offshore
companies anonymously registered in its Indian Ocean islands could
possibly be the answer to this puzzle, analysts say.
Countries
like Mauritius and the Seychelles are magnets for business entities and
entrepreneurs around the world because of their relaxed taxation,
lighter regulation of corporate activities and greater business
flexibility.
On the other hand, their strict preservation of
confidentiality for business transactions and individuals has made it
almost impossible to track where the investments that are flowing out of
these islands actually came from.
Big dreams in 'Little Africa'
SABMiller and the other large corporations only tell part of the story of Africans seeking economic opportunities in China.
Media reports estimate that China is home to more than 200,000 African immigrants.
In
the first nine months of 2014, Guangzhou, a southern Chinese city
hosting the largest African community in Asia, documented 430,000
arrivals and departures at its check points by nationals from African
countries.
Certain neighborhoods in Guangzhou are virtually all
African, often referred to as 'Chocolate City' or 'Little Africa' by
local cab drivers.
The government of Hong Kong allows 90-day
visa-free stays for citizens of many African countries, such as
Botswana, Egypt, Kenya, Malawi, Namibia, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and
Zimbabwe, making the special administrative region the easiest entry
point for African traders who make up the majority of the African
population in China.
Bo Li, the author, writes for United Nations Africa Renewal Magazine
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