Skip to navigationSkip to content
PLOT DEVELOPMENT

The Covid-19 pandemic is changing Chinaโ€™s playbook in Africa

Reuters/Joe Penney
Terms under construction.
By Jackie Bischof

Talent Lab editor

Published Last updated on

At the beginning of April this year, as Nigeria was scrambling to track coronavirus cases and dealing with tanking oil prices, a rare spot of good economic news made headlines: A deep sea port project under construction in Lagos, financed by the China Development Bank and African Development Bank, was to receive a $221 million equity investment injection from the China Harbour Engineering Company. The company is one of several shareholders in the project, along with the Nigerian Ports Authority.

For Yunnan Chen, a senior researcher in development and public finance at the Overseas Development Institute who specializes in China-Africa relations, the port is illustrative of the ways in which Africaโ€™s relationship with China was changing prior to the coronavirus pandemic.

โ€œThe monolithic idea of the China-Africa relationship that arose in the 2000s is becoming more nuanced these days,โ€ Chen says. โ€œWeโ€™re seeing more long-term participation of Chinese companies in these infrastructure projects, rather than the previously more โ€˜turn-key, build it, turn it over to the government modelโ€™ that much of African infrastructure was previously constructed through.โ€

Enrich your perspective. Embolden your work. Become a Quartz member.

Your membership supports a team of global Quartz journalists reporting on the forces shaping our world. We make sense of accelerating change and help you get ahead of it with business news for the next era, not just the next hour. Subscribe to Quartz today.

Membership includes:

ใ“ใกใ‚‰ใฏ่‹ฑ่ชž็‰ˆใธใฎ็™ป้Œฒใƒšใƒผใ‚ธใงใ™ใ€‚
Quartz Japanใธใฎ็™ป้Œฒใ‚’ใ”ๅธŒๆœ›ใฎๆ–นใฏใ“ใกใ‚‰ใ‹ใ‚‰ใ€‚