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This Is Where Xi's Belt and Road Initiative Stands Six Years Later

At least 7 countries who agreed to the project have suspended, scaled back, terminated or experienced backlash for the same.

This Is Where Xi's Belt and Road Initiative Stands Six Years Later
Xi Jinping, China’s president, arrives for the signing of the memorandum of understanding on China’s Belt and Road Initiative with Giuseppe Conte, Italy’s prime minister, not pictured, at Villa Madama in Rome, Italy. (Photographer: Alessia Pierdomenico/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- As global leaders gather in Beijing this week for Chinese President Xi Jinping’s second Belt and Road forum, here are some numbers that illustrate where the ambitious initiative is six years after its conception.

37 Heads of State

Eight more top politicians will attend the forum this year than the first one in 2017, bringing the total to 37, including two European Union members -- Austria and Portugal. With the addition of Singapore and Thailand, all the leaders of ASEAN’s 10 countries are expected to be in the Chinese capital.

Countries who are sitting out the conference after attending previously include Poland, Spain, Sri Lanka, Fiji, Turkey, and Argentina, according to consultancy Eurasia Group.

"None of these countries have had a falling out with Beijing over BRI, but geopolitical concerns may have been a factor: Turkey and China have sparred over China’s policy toward Uighurs and Poland arrested two Huawei employees for spying in January," Eurasia said.

7 Unhappy Countries

At least seven countries who’ve agreed to Belt and Road projects have suspended, scaled back, terminated or experienced backlash for their involvement in the program. Earlier this month, China struck a deal with Malaysia to resume the East Coast Rail Link project for 44 billion ringgit ($10.7 billion) -- down from 65.5 billion ringgit -- after deciding to terminate it in January as the Southeast Asian country struggled to narrow its budget deficit.

To address some of the concerns, Beijing is taking a range of steps to exert more control over the program, including a more muted publicity drive, clearer rules for state-owned-enterprises, restricting use of the BRI brand, and building overseas auditing and anti-corruption mechanisms.

173 Documents Signed

China has signed 173 cooperation documents on BRI with 125 countries and 29 international organizations as of April 18, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.

In March, Italy became the first Group of 7 country to sign up for the BRI, a big win for Beijing that also raised alarm bells in the region. Britain, Switzerland, Austria, France, Spain and Australia are among the developed countries that could sign some type of documents with China without politically endorsing the BRI, a person familiar with the matter said earlier.

$90 Billion Investment

Chinese enterprises invested over $90 billion in BRI countries between 2013 and 2018, with average annual growth of 5.2 percent, according to data released at an official press conference. BRI countries invested over $40 billion in China over the same period, the data showed.

Meanwhile, total trade between China and BRI countries has surpassed $6 trillion, with annual growth of 4 percent on average and making up 27.4 percent of China’s overall trade in the period, according to the statistics.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Dandan Li in Beijing at dli395@bloomberg.net;Miao Han in Beijing at mhan22@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Sharon Chen, James Mayger

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg