Description
The concepts of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the Maritime Silk Road were first introduced by Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visits to Kazakhstan and Indonesia in 2013.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
May 2015
Table of Contents
Page
I. Introduction 2
II. The Vision 6
III. Actions Already Performed 8
IV. Business Implications 9
Appendix I 11
Appendix II 12
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 2
I. Introduction
The concepts of the Silk Road Economic
Belt and the Maritime Silk Road were
first introduced by Chinese President Xi
Jinping during his visits to Kazakhstan
and Indonesia in 2013.
The Central Government has since then
further elaborated on the idea of
building the Silk Road Economic Belt
and the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk
Road. The concept is often
shorthanded as the “One Belt One
Road” Initiative, or more simply as the
Belt and Road.
The Belt and Road: New Sourcing and
Selling Opportunities
While the Belt provides ample
opportunities for sourcing resources
and commodities from the West and
Central Asia, the emerging South and
Southeast Asian countries along the
Road are potentially vast consumer
markets. According to a report by
Ernst & Young in 2013, emerging Asia
will account for one quarter of the
global consumer products market and
generate 38% of the global consumer
products growth by 2017.
Source: Compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence
Centre
On 28 March 2015, during the Boao
Forum for Asia, China’s National
Development and Reform Commission,
in conjunction with China’s Foreign
Ministry and Commerce Ministry,
issued an action plan for the Belt and
Road, bringing the concept one
important step closer to realization.
Titled the “Vision and Actions on Jointly
Building Silk Road Economic Belt and
21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road”, the
official document lays out the basic
goals of the “One Belt One Road”
Initiative: “It is aimed at promoting
orderly and free flow of economic
factors, highly efficient allocation of
resources and deep integration of
markets; encouraging the countries
along the Belt and Road to achieve
economic policy coordination and carry
out broader and more in-depth
regional cooperation of higher
standards; and jointly creating an open,
inclusive and balanced regional
economic cooperation architecture that
benefits all.”
The Initiative’s current priority is
infrastructure connectivity. Towards
that end, the Chinese government has
facilitated the establishment of the
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
and set up a US$40 billion Silk Road
Fund.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 3
Geographic Coverage
According to the action plan, the Belt
will have three routes and the Road will
have two routes (for a graphic
representation of these routes, please
refer to Exhibit 1).
? The Silk Road Economic Belt:
o China—Central Asia—Russia—
Europe (the Baltic)
o China—Central Asia—West
Asia—Persian Gulf—
Mediterranean Sea
o China—Southeast Asia—South
Asia—Indian Ocean
? The 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road:
o Coastal China—South China
Sea—Indian Ocean—Europe
o Coastal China—South China
Sea—South Pacific
On the same day that the official action
plan of the Initiative was announced,
China’s President Xi also revealed in his
speech that around 60 countries along
the routes have shown interest in
taking part in the development of the
Belt and Road.
Based on the five routes specified by
the action plan, the Fung Business
Intelligence Centre has identified 58
countries that are most likely to be
taking part in the Initiative (please see
the Appendix for the full list of the
countries and the relevant economic
indicators).
Together, the countries along the Belt
and Road will create an “economic
cooperation area” that stretches from
the Western Pacific to the Baltic Sea.
According to our research, these 58
countries jointly account for 64.2%,
37.3% and 31.4% of the world’s
population, GDP and household
consumption respectively today
(Exhibit 2). Many of these countries are
home to the emerging middle class and
hold the key to economic growth in the
future.
The action plan also specifies the
positioning of various regions and
provinces in China in the Initiative
(Exhibit 3).
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 4
Exhibit 1. Geographic Coverage of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21
st
Century Maritime
Silk Road
Source: Compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre based on the FRAMEWORK chapter of the “Vision and Actions on Jointly
Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road”
Exhibit 2. Economic Significance of One Belt One Road Countries
* For a full list of the countries included in the computation, please refer to the Appendix.
Source: The World Bank, compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 5
Exhibit 3. Regions & Provinces in China: Positioning in the One Belt One Road Initiative
Source: “Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road”, compiled by the Fung
Business Intelligence Centre
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 6
II. The Vision
The vision of the One Belt One Road
Initiative is to realize the “Five Links”,
which refer to linkages in policies,
infrastructure, trade, finance and
people. The “Five Links” can be
summarized as follows:
The “Five Links”
While the traditional Silk Road was
primarily a route for trading goods and
cultural and technological exchange,
the new Silk Road set out the “Five
Links” as its goal. The “Five Links” refer
to linkages in policies, infrastructure,
trade, finance and people.
1. Policy coordination
? Policy coordination among the
countries along the Belt and Road
is crucial for the success of the
Initiative. According to the
Initiative’s vision, the countries will
coordinate their economic
development strategies and
policies, and work out together
plans and measures for regional
cooperation.
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will set up a multi-level inter-
governmental macro policy
exchange and communication
mechanism.
2. Capacity building
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will improve the connectivity of
their infrastructure and harmonize
standards.
? Countries will push forward
constructions of port
infrastructure, remove bottlenecks
in land-water transportation
channels, promote cooperation of
ports, and increase sea routes and
the number of voyages.
? Countries will expand platforms
for comprehensive civil aviation
cooperation and improve aviation
infrastructure.
? Cooperation in the connectivity of
energy infrastructure will also be
promoted.
? Countries will jointly advance the
construction of communications
networks, such as cross-border
optical cable networks and
satellite information networks.
? Countries will strengthen
cooperation in science and
technology by establishing joint
laboratories and promoting
personnel exchanges.
Huge Need for Infrastructure
Financing in Asia
According to the Asian Development
Bank, between 2010 and 2020, Asia
needs to invest a total of around
US$8 trillion in national
infrastructure in order to maintain
current levels of economic growth.
However, many Asian countries are
suffering from a large infrastructure
deficit, mainly due to budgetary
constraints and a lack of investment
capital.
? China will advance cooperation
between countries along the Belt
and Road on areas such as youth
employment, entrepreneurship
training and vocational skills
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 7
development.
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will also boost student exchange
programmes.
3. Liberalization and facilitation of
trade and investment
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will enhance customs cooperation
in areas such as information
exchange, mutual recognition of
regulations and mutual assistance
in law enforcement. A “Single-
window system” will be
established in border ports.
Moreover, the countries will
promote online checking of
inspection and quarantine
certificates and facilitate mutual
recognition of Authorized
Economic Operators (AEOs).
? Countries will lower non-tariff
barriers and improve the
transparency of technical trade
measures.
? Countries will take actions to
advance investment facilitation
and to eliminate investment
barriers. Negotiations on bilateral
investment protection agreements
and double taxation avoidance
agreements will also be pushed
forward.
? Countries will expand mutual
investment areas. In particular,
cooperation in non-fossil energy
sectors such as hydropower,
nuclear power, wind power and
solar power will be strengthened.
? Countries will also promote
cooperation in emerging industries
such as new-generation
information technology,
biotechnology, new energy
technology and new materials.
? Countries will cooperate in
building various forms of industrial
parks such as overseas economic
and trade cooperation zones and
cross-border economic
cooperation zones.
4. Financial cooperation
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will strengthen financial
cooperation and increase their
efforts to build currency stability
systems, investment & financing
systems and credit information
systems in Asia.
? Countries will push forward the
establishment of the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank,
the BRICS New Development Bank,
the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) financing
institution and the Silk Road Fund.
? Countries will create or further
develop their bond markets. China
will support the governments in
the countries along the Belt and
Road as well as companies and
financial institutions with good
credit-ratings to issue yuan bonds
in China. Meanwhile, qualified
Chinese financial institutions and
companies will be encouraged to
issue bonds in yuan or in other
currencies outside China.
? Countries will expand the scope
and scale of bilateral currency
swaps and settlements.
? Commercial equity investment
funds and private funds will be
encouraged to participate in the
construction of key projects of the
Initiative.
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 8
III. Actions Already Performed
? For more than a year, the Chinese
government has been actively
promoting the One Belt One Road
Initiative.
? China has signed Memorandum of
Understandings (MOUs) of
cooperation on the joint
development of the Belt and Road
with some countries, and on
regional cooperation, border
cooperation, or mid- to long-term
development plans for economic
and trade cooperation with other
countries. It has also proposed
outlines of regional cooperation
plans with certain adjacent
countries.
? China has enhanced
communication and consultation
with countries along the Belt and
Road, and promoted a number of
key cooperation projects in the
fields of infrastructure
connectivity, industrial
investment, resource
development, economic & trade
cooperation, financial
cooperation, cultural exchanges,
ecological protection and
maritime cooperation.
? The Chinese government has
facilitated the establishment of
the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank and the Silk Road
Fund, and has reinforced the
investment function of the China-
Eurasia Economic Cooperation
Fund.
? China has also promised to offer
10,000 scholarships to countries
along the Belt and Road every year.
The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the Silk Road Fund
The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) was formally established in
October 2014. As of 29 March 2015, 42 countries had joined or applied to join the
AIIB as founding members, including the UK, Germany, France and Italy.
In December 2014, Beijing launched its US$40 billion Silk Road Fund along the lines
of a long-term private equity venture to improve transport and trade links in
countries and regions along the Silk Road. The Fund is expected to be similar to the
World Bank’s investment arm International Finance Corp and the African
Development Bank’s mutual development fund. Financed by a small group of
investors, the Fund targets infrastructure construction, exploration of natural
resources, and industrial and financial cooperation.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 9
IV. Business Implications
1. Infrastructure construction –
Capacity building to start with
hardware, especially in the early stage
of the One Belt One Road Initiative
? Infrastructure projects related to
the Initiative, such as those
invested by the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank
and the Silk Road Fund, will
benefit the construction
machinery companies,
infrastructure construction
companies, building materials
producers, as well as infrastructure
operators.
? According to the Initiative, priority
will be given to linking up
unconnected road sections and
removing transport bottlenecks.
? In particular, the plan for the
construction of a Eurasian high-
speed transport corridor linking
Beijing and Moscow will be
pushed forward.
? Connectivity within the Belt and
Road region will be greatly
enhanced.
2. Finance – Yuan internationalization
to accelerate
? Financial integration is an
important underpinning for
implementing the Belt and Road
Initiative, the process of which will
create demand for more
professional services in financial
and related sectors.
? The fundraising for large-scale
infrastructure projects will provide
opportunities for the further
development of bond markets in
Asia.
? China will encourage companies to
issue yuan bonds within China as
well as overseas to fund projects
for the One Belt One Road
Initiative. The move is expected to
boost demand for the currency.
? As trade and other economic
activities along the Belt and Road
expand, the demand for settling
trade in yuan will also increase, if
only to reduce exchange risks.
3. Trade and logistics – Regional flows
to enjoy rapid growth
? According to the Initiative, China is
going to negotiate with countries
and regions along the Belt and
Road to establish more free trade
areas.
? In addition, China will cooperate
with countries along the Belt and
Road to lower non-tariff barriers
and to jointly improve the
transparency of technical trade
measures, which will in turn
liberalize and facilitate trade.
? China will also promote cross-
border e-commerce and other
similar innovations to bring
consumers cheaper and better
imported products.
? The increased level of trading
activities will also benefit the
logistics industry.
4. Distribution and retail – The
Maritime Silk Road is well positioned
to capture the emerging middle class
? According to an OECD study in
2010, globally, the size of the
middle class may increase from 1.8
billion people in 2009 to 3.2 billion
by 2020 and to 4.9 billion by 2030.
Almost all of this growth (85%)
comes from Asia: by 2030, Asia will
represent 66% of the global
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 10
middle-class population.
? Equally striking is the growth in
purchasing power of the middle
class in Asia. Globally, consumer
spending from the middle class
may grow from US$21 trillion in
2009 to US$56 trillion by 2030.
Again, over 80% of the growth
comes from Asia: by 2030, Asia will
represent 59% of the global
middle-class consumer spending.
? Asian spending power could be
large enough to offset the
stagnant spending growth in the
developed economies. The shift in
demand will also be disruptive to
the existing global supply chains.
The Emerging Middle Class along the
Silk Road
Globally, consumer spending from the
middle class may grow from US$21
trillion in 2009 to US$56 trillion by
2030. Over 80% of the growth comes
from Asia: by 2030 Asia will represent
59% of the global middle-class
consumer spending.
5. Tourism – More frequent exchanges
among the Belt and Road countries
? China will cooperate with
countries along the Belt and Road
on tourism.
? Application processes for tourist
visas in countries along the Belt
and Road will be streamlined.
? In particular, tourism cooperation
between the Tibet Autonomous
Region and neighboring countries
such as Nepal will be promoted.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 11
?Appendix I
List of Countries Included in Computing the Percentage Shares Shown in
Exhibit 2 - Economic Significance of One Belt One Road Countries
The following countries are selected by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre, based on
the FRAMEWORK Chapter of the “Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road
Economic Belt and 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road” and President Xi Jinping’s speech
on 28 March 2015.
Source: The World Bank, compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 12
? Appendix II
Latest Developments on the ‘One Belt One Road’ Initiative (as of end
April 2015)
China pledges to deepen
cooperation with Asian and
African countries
At the Asian-African Summit 2015 held in
Jakarta, Indonesia, China’s President Xi
Jinping delivered a speech calling for
win-win cooperation among Asian and
African countries.
President Xi promised to grant zero-tariff
treatment by the end of this year to 97%
of the tariff items imported from the
least developed countries (LDCs) which
have diplomatic ties with China, and to
continue to provide assistance to
developing countries without any
political preconditions.
President Xi also announced that, in the
coming five years, China would offer
100,000 training opportunities to
developing countries in Asia and Africa;
continue hosting gathering among Asian
and African youths to promote
friendship and would invite 2,000 Asian
and African young people to visit China
and join the gathering; establish a
China-Asia-Africa cooperation center
to promote exchanges and
cooperation; and set up an exchange
and study program on international
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 13
law between China and the
Asian-African Legal Consultative
Organization.
China promises investment of
US$46 billion in Pakistan
During the landmark two-day visit of
China’s President Xi Jinping to Pakistan in
April, China signed agreements with
Pakistan promising investment of
$46 billion. The focus of the spending is
on building a China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC), a 3,000-kilometre road
and rail link from China’s north-western
city of Kashgar to Pakistan’s Gwadar
Port, a deep-sea port situated on the
Arabian Sea. The mega plan not only
covers the construction of highways and
railways, but also oil and gas pipelines
and electricity projects.
The CPEC is expected to spur
investments, boost bilateral trade flows
between the two countries, improve
infrastructure, and help ease the energy
shortage in Pakistan. According to
Reuters, under the CPEC agreement,
US$15.5 billion worth of coal, wind, solar
and hydro energy projects will be built
by 2017, which will add 10,400
megawatts of power to Pakistan’s
national grid. By 2021, another 6,120
megawatts will be added to the
country’s national grid at a cost of
US$18.2 billion. A US$44 million optical
fibre cable between the two countries
will also be built.
Also during Xi's visit, Pakistan's Karot
Hydropower Project became the first
recipient of funding support from
China's US$40 billion Silk Road Fund.
The two countries also set the target of
lifting bilateral trade to US$20 billion in
three years, up from the current US$16
billion.
Talking about the China-Pakistan
Economic corridor, the Pakistani Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif said, ‘This corridor
will benefit all provinces and areas in
Pakistan, and transform our country into
a regional hub and pivot for commerce
and investment. It will also enable China
to create a shorter and cheaper route for
trade and investment in south, central
and west Asia, and the Middle East
and Africa. This corridor will become a
symbol for peace and prosperity.”
Silk Road Fund makes
its first investment
China’s Silk Road Fund makes its first
investment in a hydropower project in
Pakistan. During China’s President Xi
Jinping’s visit to Pakistan, the Silk Road
Fund unveiled its investment in the Karot
Hydropower Project in Pakistan, the first
investment project since the Fund’s
establishment in December 2014. The
project is expected to cost about
US$1.65 billion. (As of the time of
writing, it is still not clear how much of
the investment amount will come from
the Silk Road Fund.)
The Karot Hydropower Project, which
is scheduled to start operation by
2020, will be run by the Chinese side
for 30 years before being handed over
to the Pakistan government.
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 14
The Silk Road Fund will continue to find
investment opportunities for other
projects under the framework of the
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, and
will also look for opportunities
involved in the Belt and Road initiative.
Founding members of
AIIB finalized at 57
57 countries have submitted their
applications and become the founding
members of the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank (AIIB), with the
application deadline closing on 31
March. Of the 57 founding members, 37
are from Asia and Oceania, and the rest
are from Europe, Africa and Latin
America. (Note that the deadline for
founding membership application has
passed. The AIIB will continue to accept
ordinary members, which hold voting
rights but have less say in the rule-
making process.)
Representatives of the 57 founding
member countries will convene in late
April and late May to deliberate on the
AIIB charter. With the signing of the
charter expected to take place by
the end of June, the AIIB is set to be
launched by the end of this year.
Turkey joins AIIB as a
founding member
Turkey has become a founding member
of the Asian Infrastructure Investment
Bank (AIIB), according to a statement
released by China’s Ministry of
Finance on 10 April. As a founding
member of the bank, Turkey possesses
the right to establish the rules for the
bank’s activities.
China and Turkey boost
economic ties
Ever since China and Turkey upgraded
their relations to a strategic partnership
in 2010, the two countries have enjoyed
booming development in bilateral trade
and investment relations.
In 2014, China became Turkey’s 2
nd
largest source of imports and 19
th
largest market of exports, according to
data from the Turkish Statistical
Institute. Total trade volume between
the two countries amounted to US$27.8
billion in 2014, a 42.6% increase
compared with US$ 19.5 billion in 2010.
Besides, Turkey has become increasingly
popular among Chinese investors. A
group of Chinese enterprises, such as
Hainan Airlines, China’s major
locomotive maker CSR Corporation Ltd.
and agribusiness New Hope Group, have
already invested in Turkey, in areas such
as transportation, energy,
telecommunications, mining and
tourism. It is also noteworthy that the
Ankara-Istanbul high-speed railway, one
of the signature projects of the Turkish
government, is jointly built by a Chinese-
Turkish Consortium.
In November 2014, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed his
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 15
support for the Silk Road Economic Belt
and Maritime Silk Road Initiative that put
forward by China, during a meeting with
Meng Jinzhou, special envoy of China’s
President Xi Jinping. As a country that
enjoys favorable location stretching to
Asia, Europe and the Middle East,
Turkey’s participation in the Initiative
will definitely help break infrastructure
bottlenecks, further integrate markets,
and better allocate resources in the
region.
The Fung Group is a privately held multinational group of
companies headquartered in Hong Kong whose core businesses
are trading, logistics, distribution and retailing. The Fung Group
employs 46,800 people across 40 economies worldwide,
generating total revenue of more than US$24.65 billion in 2014.
Fung Holdings (1937) Limited, a privately held business entity
headquartered in Hong Kong, is the major shareholder of the Fung
group of companies.
The Fung Business Intelligence Centre collects and analyses
market data on sourcing, supply chains, distribution and retail. It
also provides thought leadership on technology and other key
issues shaping their future.
Headquartered in Hong Kong, FBIC leverages unique
relationships and information networks to track and report on
trends and developments in China and other Asian countries. In
addition, its New York-based Global Retail & Technology research
team follows broader retail and technology trends, specialising in
how they intersect and building collaborative knowledge
communities around the revolution occurring worldwide at the
retail interface.
Since its establishment in 2000, the FBIC (formerly known as the
Li & Fung Research Centre) has served as the knowledge bank and
think tank for the Fung Group. Through regular research reports
and other publications, it makes its market data, impartial analysis
and expertise available to businesses, scholars and governments
around the world. It also provides advice and consultancy services
to colleagues and business partners of the Fung Group on issues
related to doing business in China, ranging from market entry and
company structure, to tax, licensing and other regulatory matters.
Authors
Helen Chin
Fong Lau
Winnie He
Timothy Cheung
Global Sourcing
Fung Business Intelligence Centre
10/F LiFung Tower
888 Cheung Sha Wan Road
Kowloon, Hong Kong
T: (852) 2300 2470
F: (852) 2635 1598
E: [email protected]
www.fbicgroup.com
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The concepts of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the Maritime Silk Road were first introduced by Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visits to Kazakhstan and Indonesia in 2013.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
May 2015
Table of Contents
Page
I. Introduction 2
II. The Vision 6
III. Actions Already Performed 8
IV. Business Implications 9
Appendix I 11
Appendix II 12
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 2
I. Introduction
The concepts of the Silk Road Economic
Belt and the Maritime Silk Road were
first introduced by Chinese President Xi
Jinping during his visits to Kazakhstan
and Indonesia in 2013.
The Central Government has since then
further elaborated on the idea of
building the Silk Road Economic Belt
and the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk
Road. The concept is often
shorthanded as the “One Belt One
Road” Initiative, or more simply as the
Belt and Road.
The Belt and Road: New Sourcing and
Selling Opportunities
While the Belt provides ample
opportunities for sourcing resources
and commodities from the West and
Central Asia, the emerging South and
Southeast Asian countries along the
Road are potentially vast consumer
markets. According to a report by
Ernst & Young in 2013, emerging Asia
will account for one quarter of the
global consumer products market and
generate 38% of the global consumer
products growth by 2017.
Source: Compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence
Centre
On 28 March 2015, during the Boao
Forum for Asia, China’s National
Development and Reform Commission,
in conjunction with China’s Foreign
Ministry and Commerce Ministry,
issued an action plan for the Belt and
Road, bringing the concept one
important step closer to realization.
Titled the “Vision and Actions on Jointly
Building Silk Road Economic Belt and
21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road”, the
official document lays out the basic
goals of the “One Belt One Road”
Initiative: “It is aimed at promoting
orderly and free flow of economic
factors, highly efficient allocation of
resources and deep integration of
markets; encouraging the countries
along the Belt and Road to achieve
economic policy coordination and carry
out broader and more in-depth
regional cooperation of higher
standards; and jointly creating an open,
inclusive and balanced regional
economic cooperation architecture that
benefits all.”
The Initiative’s current priority is
infrastructure connectivity. Towards
that end, the Chinese government has
facilitated the establishment of the
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
and set up a US$40 billion Silk Road
Fund.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 3
Geographic Coverage
According to the action plan, the Belt
will have three routes and the Road will
have two routes (for a graphic
representation of these routes, please
refer to Exhibit 1).
? The Silk Road Economic Belt:
o China—Central Asia—Russia—
Europe (the Baltic)
o China—Central Asia—West
Asia—Persian Gulf—
Mediterranean Sea
o China—Southeast Asia—South
Asia—Indian Ocean
? The 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road:
o Coastal China—South China
Sea—Indian Ocean—Europe
o Coastal China—South China
Sea—South Pacific
On the same day that the official action
plan of the Initiative was announced,
China’s President Xi also revealed in his
speech that around 60 countries along
the routes have shown interest in
taking part in the development of the
Belt and Road.
Based on the five routes specified by
the action plan, the Fung Business
Intelligence Centre has identified 58
countries that are most likely to be
taking part in the Initiative (please see
the Appendix for the full list of the
countries and the relevant economic
indicators).
Together, the countries along the Belt
and Road will create an “economic
cooperation area” that stretches from
the Western Pacific to the Baltic Sea.
According to our research, these 58
countries jointly account for 64.2%,
37.3% and 31.4% of the world’s
population, GDP and household
consumption respectively today
(Exhibit 2). Many of these countries are
home to the emerging middle class and
hold the key to economic growth in the
future.
The action plan also specifies the
positioning of various regions and
provinces in China in the Initiative
(Exhibit 3).
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 4
Exhibit 1. Geographic Coverage of the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21
st
Century Maritime
Silk Road
Source: Compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre based on the FRAMEWORK chapter of the “Vision and Actions on Jointly
Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road”
Exhibit 2. Economic Significance of One Belt One Road Countries
* For a full list of the countries included in the computation, please refer to the Appendix.
Source: The World Bank, compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 5
Exhibit 3. Regions & Provinces in China: Positioning in the One Belt One Road Initiative
Source: “Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road”, compiled by the Fung
Business Intelligence Centre
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 6
II. The Vision
The vision of the One Belt One Road
Initiative is to realize the “Five Links”,
which refer to linkages in policies,
infrastructure, trade, finance and
people. The “Five Links” can be
summarized as follows:
The “Five Links”
While the traditional Silk Road was
primarily a route for trading goods and
cultural and technological exchange,
the new Silk Road set out the “Five
Links” as its goal. The “Five Links” refer
to linkages in policies, infrastructure,
trade, finance and people.
1. Policy coordination
? Policy coordination among the
countries along the Belt and Road
is crucial for the success of the
Initiative. According to the
Initiative’s vision, the countries will
coordinate their economic
development strategies and
policies, and work out together
plans and measures for regional
cooperation.
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will set up a multi-level inter-
governmental macro policy
exchange and communication
mechanism.
2. Capacity building
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will improve the connectivity of
their infrastructure and harmonize
standards.
? Countries will push forward
constructions of port
infrastructure, remove bottlenecks
in land-water transportation
channels, promote cooperation of
ports, and increase sea routes and
the number of voyages.
? Countries will expand platforms
for comprehensive civil aviation
cooperation and improve aviation
infrastructure.
? Cooperation in the connectivity of
energy infrastructure will also be
promoted.
? Countries will jointly advance the
construction of communications
networks, such as cross-border
optical cable networks and
satellite information networks.
? Countries will strengthen
cooperation in science and
technology by establishing joint
laboratories and promoting
personnel exchanges.
Huge Need for Infrastructure
Financing in Asia
According to the Asian Development
Bank, between 2010 and 2020, Asia
needs to invest a total of around
US$8 trillion in national
infrastructure in order to maintain
current levels of economic growth.
However, many Asian countries are
suffering from a large infrastructure
deficit, mainly due to budgetary
constraints and a lack of investment
capital.
? China will advance cooperation
between countries along the Belt
and Road on areas such as youth
employment, entrepreneurship
training and vocational skills
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 7
development.
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will also boost student exchange
programmes.
3. Liberalization and facilitation of
trade and investment
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will enhance customs cooperation
in areas such as information
exchange, mutual recognition of
regulations and mutual assistance
in law enforcement. A “Single-
window system” will be
established in border ports.
Moreover, the countries will
promote online checking of
inspection and quarantine
certificates and facilitate mutual
recognition of Authorized
Economic Operators (AEOs).
? Countries will lower non-tariff
barriers and improve the
transparency of technical trade
measures.
? Countries will take actions to
advance investment facilitation
and to eliminate investment
barriers. Negotiations on bilateral
investment protection agreements
and double taxation avoidance
agreements will also be pushed
forward.
? Countries will expand mutual
investment areas. In particular,
cooperation in non-fossil energy
sectors such as hydropower,
nuclear power, wind power and
solar power will be strengthened.
? Countries will also promote
cooperation in emerging industries
such as new-generation
information technology,
biotechnology, new energy
technology and new materials.
? Countries will cooperate in
building various forms of industrial
parks such as overseas economic
and trade cooperation zones and
cross-border economic
cooperation zones.
4. Financial cooperation
? Countries along the Belt and Road
will strengthen financial
cooperation and increase their
efforts to build currency stability
systems, investment & financing
systems and credit information
systems in Asia.
? Countries will push forward the
establishment of the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank,
the BRICS New Development Bank,
the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) financing
institution and the Silk Road Fund.
? Countries will create or further
develop their bond markets. China
will support the governments in
the countries along the Belt and
Road as well as companies and
financial institutions with good
credit-ratings to issue yuan bonds
in China. Meanwhile, qualified
Chinese financial institutions and
companies will be encouraged to
issue bonds in yuan or in other
currencies outside China.
? Countries will expand the scope
and scale of bilateral currency
swaps and settlements.
? Commercial equity investment
funds and private funds will be
encouraged to participate in the
construction of key projects of the
Initiative.
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 8
III. Actions Already Performed
? For more than a year, the Chinese
government has been actively
promoting the One Belt One Road
Initiative.
? China has signed Memorandum of
Understandings (MOUs) of
cooperation on the joint
development of the Belt and Road
with some countries, and on
regional cooperation, border
cooperation, or mid- to long-term
development plans for economic
and trade cooperation with other
countries. It has also proposed
outlines of regional cooperation
plans with certain adjacent
countries.
? China has enhanced
communication and consultation
with countries along the Belt and
Road, and promoted a number of
key cooperation projects in the
fields of infrastructure
connectivity, industrial
investment, resource
development, economic & trade
cooperation, financial
cooperation, cultural exchanges,
ecological protection and
maritime cooperation.
? The Chinese government has
facilitated the establishment of
the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank and the Silk Road
Fund, and has reinforced the
investment function of the China-
Eurasia Economic Cooperation
Fund.
? China has also promised to offer
10,000 scholarships to countries
along the Belt and Road every year.
The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the Silk Road Fund
The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) was formally established in
October 2014. As of 29 March 2015, 42 countries had joined or applied to join the
AIIB as founding members, including the UK, Germany, France and Italy.
In December 2014, Beijing launched its US$40 billion Silk Road Fund along the lines
of a long-term private equity venture to improve transport and trade links in
countries and regions along the Silk Road. The Fund is expected to be similar to the
World Bank’s investment arm International Finance Corp and the African
Development Bank’s mutual development fund. Financed by a small group of
investors, the Fund targets infrastructure construction, exploration of natural
resources, and industrial and financial cooperation.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 9
IV. Business Implications
1. Infrastructure construction –
Capacity building to start with
hardware, especially in the early stage
of the One Belt One Road Initiative
? Infrastructure projects related to
the Initiative, such as those
invested by the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank
and the Silk Road Fund, will
benefit the construction
machinery companies,
infrastructure construction
companies, building materials
producers, as well as infrastructure
operators.
? According to the Initiative, priority
will be given to linking up
unconnected road sections and
removing transport bottlenecks.
? In particular, the plan for the
construction of a Eurasian high-
speed transport corridor linking
Beijing and Moscow will be
pushed forward.
? Connectivity within the Belt and
Road region will be greatly
enhanced.
2. Finance – Yuan internationalization
to accelerate
? Financial integration is an
important underpinning for
implementing the Belt and Road
Initiative, the process of which will
create demand for more
professional services in financial
and related sectors.
? The fundraising for large-scale
infrastructure projects will provide
opportunities for the further
development of bond markets in
Asia.
? China will encourage companies to
issue yuan bonds within China as
well as overseas to fund projects
for the One Belt One Road
Initiative. The move is expected to
boost demand for the currency.
? As trade and other economic
activities along the Belt and Road
expand, the demand for settling
trade in yuan will also increase, if
only to reduce exchange risks.
3. Trade and logistics – Regional flows
to enjoy rapid growth
? According to the Initiative, China is
going to negotiate with countries
and regions along the Belt and
Road to establish more free trade
areas.
? In addition, China will cooperate
with countries along the Belt and
Road to lower non-tariff barriers
and to jointly improve the
transparency of technical trade
measures, which will in turn
liberalize and facilitate trade.
? China will also promote cross-
border e-commerce and other
similar innovations to bring
consumers cheaper and better
imported products.
? The increased level of trading
activities will also benefit the
logistics industry.
4. Distribution and retail – The
Maritime Silk Road is well positioned
to capture the emerging middle class
? According to an OECD study in
2010, globally, the size of the
middle class may increase from 1.8
billion people in 2009 to 3.2 billion
by 2020 and to 4.9 billion by 2030.
Almost all of this growth (85%)
comes from Asia: by 2030, Asia will
represent 66% of the global
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 10
middle-class population.
? Equally striking is the growth in
purchasing power of the middle
class in Asia. Globally, consumer
spending from the middle class
may grow from US$21 trillion in
2009 to US$56 trillion by 2030.
Again, over 80% of the growth
comes from Asia: by 2030, Asia will
represent 59% of the global
middle-class consumer spending.
? Asian spending power could be
large enough to offset the
stagnant spending growth in the
developed economies. The shift in
demand will also be disruptive to
the existing global supply chains.
The Emerging Middle Class along the
Silk Road
Globally, consumer spending from the
middle class may grow from US$21
trillion in 2009 to US$56 trillion by
2030. Over 80% of the growth comes
from Asia: by 2030 Asia will represent
59% of the global middle-class
consumer spending.
5. Tourism – More frequent exchanges
among the Belt and Road countries
? China will cooperate with
countries along the Belt and Road
on tourism.
? Application processes for tourist
visas in countries along the Belt
and Road will be streamlined.
? In particular, tourism cooperation
between the Tibet Autonomous
Region and neighboring countries
such as Nepal will be promoted.
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 11
?Appendix I
List of Countries Included in Computing the Percentage Shares Shown in
Exhibit 2 - Economic Significance of One Belt One Road Countries
The following countries are selected by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre, based on
the FRAMEWORK Chapter of the “Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road
Economic Belt and 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road” and President Xi Jinping’s speech
on 28 March 2015.
Source: The World Bank, compiled by the Fung Business Intelligence Centre
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 12
? Appendix II
Latest Developments on the ‘One Belt One Road’ Initiative (as of end
April 2015)
China pledges to deepen
cooperation with Asian and
African countries
At the Asian-African Summit 2015 held in
Jakarta, Indonesia, China’s President Xi
Jinping delivered a speech calling for
win-win cooperation among Asian and
African countries.
President Xi promised to grant zero-tariff
treatment by the end of this year to 97%
of the tariff items imported from the
least developed countries (LDCs) which
have diplomatic ties with China, and to
continue to provide assistance to
developing countries without any
political preconditions.
President Xi also announced that, in the
coming five years, China would offer
100,000 training opportunities to
developing countries in Asia and Africa;
continue hosting gathering among Asian
and African youths to promote
friendship and would invite 2,000 Asian
and African young people to visit China
and join the gathering; establish a
China-Asia-Africa cooperation center
to promote exchanges and
cooperation; and set up an exchange
and study program on international
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 13
law between China and the
Asian-African Legal Consultative
Organization.
China promises investment of
US$46 billion in Pakistan
During the landmark two-day visit of
China’s President Xi Jinping to Pakistan in
April, China signed agreements with
Pakistan promising investment of
$46 billion. The focus of the spending is
on building a China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC), a 3,000-kilometre road
and rail link from China’s north-western
city of Kashgar to Pakistan’s Gwadar
Port, a deep-sea port situated on the
Arabian Sea. The mega plan not only
covers the construction of highways and
railways, but also oil and gas pipelines
and electricity projects.
The CPEC is expected to spur
investments, boost bilateral trade flows
between the two countries, improve
infrastructure, and help ease the energy
shortage in Pakistan. According to
Reuters, under the CPEC agreement,
US$15.5 billion worth of coal, wind, solar
and hydro energy projects will be built
by 2017, which will add 10,400
megawatts of power to Pakistan’s
national grid. By 2021, another 6,120
megawatts will be added to the
country’s national grid at a cost of
US$18.2 billion. A US$44 million optical
fibre cable between the two countries
will also be built.
Also during Xi's visit, Pakistan's Karot
Hydropower Project became the first
recipient of funding support from
China's US$40 billion Silk Road Fund.
The two countries also set the target of
lifting bilateral trade to US$20 billion in
three years, up from the current US$16
billion.
Talking about the China-Pakistan
Economic corridor, the Pakistani Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif said, ‘This corridor
will benefit all provinces and areas in
Pakistan, and transform our country into
a regional hub and pivot for commerce
and investment. It will also enable China
to create a shorter and cheaper route for
trade and investment in south, central
and west Asia, and the Middle East
and Africa. This corridor will become a
symbol for peace and prosperity.”
Silk Road Fund makes
its first investment
China’s Silk Road Fund makes its first
investment in a hydropower project in
Pakistan. During China’s President Xi
Jinping’s visit to Pakistan, the Silk Road
Fund unveiled its investment in the Karot
Hydropower Project in Pakistan, the first
investment project since the Fund’s
establishment in December 2014. The
project is expected to cost about
US$1.65 billion. (As of the time of
writing, it is still not clear how much of
the investment amount will come from
the Silk Road Fund.)
The Karot Hydropower Project, which
is scheduled to start operation by
2020, will be run by the Chinese side
for 30 years before being handed over
to the Pakistan government.
Fung Business Intelligence Centre Page 14
The Silk Road Fund will continue to find
investment opportunities for other
projects under the framework of the
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, and
will also look for opportunities
involved in the Belt and Road initiative.
Founding members of
AIIB finalized at 57
57 countries have submitted their
applications and become the founding
members of the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank (AIIB), with the
application deadline closing on 31
March. Of the 57 founding members, 37
are from Asia and Oceania, and the rest
are from Europe, Africa and Latin
America. (Note that the deadline for
founding membership application has
passed. The AIIB will continue to accept
ordinary members, which hold voting
rights but have less say in the rule-
making process.)
Representatives of the 57 founding
member countries will convene in late
April and late May to deliberate on the
AIIB charter. With the signing of the
charter expected to take place by
the end of June, the AIIB is set to be
launched by the end of this year.
Turkey joins AIIB as a
founding member
Turkey has become a founding member
of the Asian Infrastructure Investment
Bank (AIIB), according to a statement
released by China’s Ministry of
Finance on 10 April. As a founding
member of the bank, Turkey possesses
the right to establish the rules for the
bank’s activities.
China and Turkey boost
economic ties
Ever since China and Turkey upgraded
their relations to a strategic partnership
in 2010, the two countries have enjoyed
booming development in bilateral trade
and investment relations.
In 2014, China became Turkey’s 2
nd
largest source of imports and 19
th
largest market of exports, according to
data from the Turkish Statistical
Institute. Total trade volume between
the two countries amounted to US$27.8
billion in 2014, a 42.6% increase
compared with US$ 19.5 billion in 2010.
Besides, Turkey has become increasingly
popular among Chinese investors. A
group of Chinese enterprises, such as
Hainan Airlines, China’s major
locomotive maker CSR Corporation Ltd.
and agribusiness New Hope Group, have
already invested in Turkey, in areas such
as transportation, energy,
telecommunications, mining and
tourism. It is also noteworthy that the
Ankara-Istanbul high-speed railway, one
of the signature projects of the Turkish
government, is jointly built by a Chinese-
Turkish Consortium.
In November 2014, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed his
The Silk Road Economic Belt and
the 21
st
Century Maritime Silk Road
Page 15
support for the Silk Road Economic Belt
and Maritime Silk Road Initiative that put
forward by China, during a meeting with
Meng Jinzhou, special envoy of China’s
President Xi Jinping. As a country that
enjoys favorable location stretching to
Asia, Europe and the Middle East,
Turkey’s participation in the Initiative
will definitely help break infrastructure
bottlenecks, further integrate markets,
and better allocate resources in the
region.
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Authors
Helen Chin
Fong Lau
Winnie He
Timothy Cheung
Global Sourcing
Fung Business Intelligence Centre
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