Why China’s Belt and Road Initiative offers world of business investment opportunities
- Nation leads ambitious economic development plan which aims to promote trade and infrastructure ties across Asia, Africa and Europe
- Businesses must formulate strategic goals to better understand how they can benefit from proposals that will involve more than 100 nations
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China has experienced a rapid transformation since it began to open up and reform its economy in 1978.
Its average gross domestic product (GDP) growth – based on resource-intensive manufacturing, exports and low labour costs – has averaged nearly 10 per cent a year and it is now the world’s second largest economy.
China, which reported a GDP of US$14.1 trillion last year – the second highest in the world – has one of the highest projected growth rates among trillion-dollar economies, according to Nasdaq, the American stock exchange.
As an emerging global superpower, its economic strength and influence presents huge opportunities for both multinational corporations and start-ups as the rising middle-class fuels consumption demand.
However, China’s influence extends far beyond its national borders. In recent years it has been leading efforts to promote greater regional development.
In 2013, Chinese President Xi Jinping proposed its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) – an ambitious collection of development and infrastructure plans stretching from East Asia to Europe – which seeks to deepen investment and trade partnerships between China and nations throughout Asia, Africa and Europe.