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  • Ciao from Rome, where Chinese President Xi Jinping has kicked off the first leg of his European tour.

  • The three-nation visit includes France and Monaco,

  • but it's really his stop here in Italy that has people talking the most.

  • Why?

  • This moment here.

  • The signing of a memorandum of understanding, or MOU,

  • that will deepen Italy and China's economic ties.

  • President Xi's visit to Rome saw a total of 29 deals signed,

  • focusing on everything from agriculture and finance, to energy and engineering.

  • Combined, they're worth $2.8 billion.

  • So what brings China to Europe? And why is Italy, a member of the NATO alliance

  • and the third largest country in the Eurozone, so receptive?

  • In 2013, China announced its Belt and Road Initiative, an ambitious plan that aims to strengthen

  • infrastructure and trade links between China and an estimated 65 other countries across 3 continents.

  • It links the western tip of Europe to North Africa and the Gulf countries,

  • and continues all the way through to South East Asia and onto the east coast of China.

  • Gaining both sea and land access to Europe is an essential part of the initiative.

  • In 2016, debt-ridden Greece sold a 51% stake of its largest seaport, Piraeus Port,

  • to China's state-owned COSCO Shipping. The $313 million sale was a part of Greece's

  • privatization process and came at a time of deep economic distress.

  • This was a first point of entry into Europe for China, and a Mediterranean base.

  • Italy has now emerged as another European economic partner,

  • but crucially it is the first G7 industrialized nation to officially endorse China's Belt and Road Initiative

  • and has shown a willingness to open up its ports as well.

  • History buffs will note the remarkable similarities between

  • the key locations on China's new Belt and Road Initiative

  • and Italian Marco Polo's route to and from China in the 1200s.

  • Both routes pass through the Adriatic Sea, which is where the Port of Trieste is located.

  • It is one of the ports mentioned in the MOU. In fact, Belt and Road in Italian is commonly referred to

  • as Via Della Seta, which literally translates toThe Silk Road.”

  • Now this is all coming at a very interesting time for Italy economically-speaking as well.

  • 2018 was a year that saw the country underperform versus other Eurozone countries.

  • Italy's general election in March didn't have a clear winner,

  • but it did have losers from the more established parties,

  • like Matteo Renzi's Democratic Party and Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia party.

  • A few months later Italy's new government was sworn in,

  • a coalition of the Eurosceptic Lega party and the anti-establishment Five Star Movement.

  • The new government's initial budget increased deficit spending,

  • essentially using more money than it was getting.

  • Markets did not like that. It led to sharp decline in Italian assets,

  • and trading in bank stocks even had to be temporarily stopped.

  • You see, Italy has one of the highest debt to GDP ratios in the world.

  • Its outstanding debt is now at more than $2.5 trillion,

  • much more than its GDP of $1.9 trillion, which still hasn't fully recovered since the financial crisis.

  • Foreign investors are also putting less money into Italy.

  • After investors put a record $77 billion into Italy in 2008

  • foreign direct investment took a tumble in 2009, and hasn't really recovered since.

  • Italy sees inking a deal with Beijing as one way of attracting new investments into the country.

  • And trade is an area that could have good potential too. Italian exports to China in 2018 only tallied up

  • to about $15.5 billion, paling in comparison to Germany and the U.K.

  • Italy is technically in a recession.

  • The hope of course is that inking deals like this will help boost productivity and growth.

  • But not everyone is happy with this new found alliance.

  • The EU are sceptical of the Belt and Road initiative not least because they view it as a means of China

  • advancing their military and diplomatic clout within the continent.

  • It's also coming at a time where the relationship between Brussels and Rome

  • is quite frayed on the back of Italy's public spending plans,

  • as well as their hard-line stance toward immigration.

  • And in the U.S., the National Security Council account warned:

  • Endorsing BRI lends legitimacy to China's predatory approach to investment

  • and will bring no benefits to the Italian people.”

  • The White House has also labelled it as a 'vanity' project.

  • While Prime Minister Conte has defended the deal with China, the question becomes:

  • Is Italy open for business? Or is it up for sale?

Ciao from Rome, where Chinese President Xi Jinping has kicked off the first leg of his European tour.

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中國和意大利的新聯盟背後的故事|CNBC報道 (The story behind China and Italy's new alliance | CNBC Reports)

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    Summer 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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