China's
Rising Clout Spotlighted at Finance Chief Meetings before West + Japan
Dominated G7 Summit
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The meeting with Brazil, the Comoros, India,
Indonesia, Singapore and South Korea primarily tackled issues such as debt and high-level
infrastructure investment, in a tacit counter to China's Belt and Road initiative
The weekend gathering of finance
chiefs from the Group of Seven (G7) advanced economies did not single out China
as a threat in their communique, but left signs the world's second-largest economy
will loom large at this week's summit in Hiroshima.
Efforts to grapple with China's
growing global presence were evident at the three-day G7 finance chiefs' gathering
in Niigata, Japan, during which they held their first outreach in 14 years, aimed
at winning over emerging nations.
The meeting with Brazil, the
Comoros, India, Indonesia, Singapore and South Korea primarily tackled issues such
as debt and high-level infrastructure investment, in a tacit counter to China's
Belt and Road initiative, analysts say.
"What's going on at the
G7 is reflecting changes in global order following the loss of the U.S. dominance,"
said Masamichi Adachi, economist at UBS Securities. "No
one is being able to draw up a grand design with shifting of power."
G7 host Japan persuaded its G7
counterparts to launch a new programme by the end of 2023 to diversify supply chains
for strategically important goods away from China. The G7 comprises the United States,
Britain, France, Japan, Italy, Germany and Canada.
But the finance chiefs' closing
communique did not mention a U.S.-proposed idea for narrow restrictions on investment
to China, a potential rift among the grouping on how far they should go in pressuring
Beijing.
A Japanese finance ministry official
at the gathering, who declined to be named because of he sensitivity of the matter, said the idea was discussed
in Niigata, but declined to elaborate.
China is among the biggest markets
for most G7 countries, particularly for export-reliant economies such as Japan and
Germany. China-bound exports account for 22% of Japan's overall shipments.
Japan and the United States want
to try to win over countries, including those in the Global South, with promises
of foreign direct investment and aid, analysts say.
U.S. President Joe Biden last
year was host of a U.S.-Africa leaders
summit in Washington, aiming to bolster alliances amid the growing Chinese presence
on that continent.
Japan followed suit, with Prime
Minister Fumio Kishida visiting Egypt, Ghana, Kenya and Mozambique this month.
In a joint statement on Saturday,
the G7 finance chiefs stressed the urgency of addressing debt vulnerabilities in
low- and middle-income countries, mentioning Zambia, Ethiopia, Ghana and Sri Lanka.
They did not mention China, but
said foreign investments in critical infrastructure "may pose risks for economic
sovereignty," and thus must "not undermine the economic sovereignty of
host countries."
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
said in March that Beijing's lending activities left developing countries "trapped
in debt," adding that Washington was working to counter China's influence in
international institutions and in lending.
"There were talks about
coercion" at the G7 finance leaders' meeting, the Japanese finance ministry
official said.
The G7 summit will most likely
have a special session on China to debate Beijing's "economic coercion"
against other countries, according to a Reuters report.
"No matter how the G7 want
to fence in the Global South, it's not easy," said Atsushi Takeda, chief economist
at the Itochu Economic Research Institute. "These emerging economies won't
side with either the West or China, while carefully weighing what will be in their
best interests."