Aight, for this one I’ll have to (re)look up several things for sourcing and I’ll reply in a more extensive fashion later as a result, but the gist of it (apart from the fact both nations obviously don’t resort to regime change at the drop of a hat, or at all- and actually negotiate towards win-win results) is-
both of these countries (and their corporations- which while still generally a mix of capitalist and state enterprise, are actually held accountable for their behavior by both respective states) support other nations’ attempts at securing sovereignty over their own natural resources (as western capital smears it- “resource nationalism”). Examples would include Indonesia’s raw copper export ban (and many others like it) aimed at moving up the value chain by moving the refining processes (and thus the value-added profits) into their own countries- and Niger raising their uranium royalties from €0.80/kg to a more market-accurate rate of €200/kg (basically stopping France’s free ride- many other countries are demanding renegotiations of “post-colonial” royalties agreements forced on them).
China and Russia are actually aiding in the development of value-added industries in the global south (factories, refineries, etc- including those that meet local needs, from solar panels, cars, concrete plants, etc), in the training and education of local populations (and various technology transfer programs) and in the development of infrastructure suited to local development and needs rather than neo-colonial resource exploitation. The various projects of the BRI is probably the best example of this, interconnecting countries across Africa and Eurasia, and facilitating regional trade and integration in regions (like pretty much all of Africa/Latin America) that have been made dependent on exporting to western countries prior. All over the world you see telecom infrastructure popping up in places the west had left barren- power plants, airports, decent roads and even at times railways leading to bumfuck-nowhere towns (as someone who has lived in bumfuck-nowhere towns myself), schools, sanitation infrastructure, etc… as well as the rise of domestic agriculture that meets local needs- and it’s not the west that is aiding with that. There are so many examples I could bring up, but China’s support in building Afghanistan’s first wholly owned photovoltaic factory (solar panels, basically) comes to mind- a stark difference compared to the decades of US occupation where they left the economy to the raw resource corporate bandits and tribal opium warlords. Russia meanwhile is building a nuclear power plant in Burkina Faso, which is negotiating a federation with Mali and Niger (two countries France has been looting for Uranium for decades). I could point to all sorts of similar infrastructure projects and agreements that primarily serve to meet domestic needs- high speed passenger rail connecting Java in Indonesia, rail lines connecting Ethiopia and in the works of extending to Kenya and South Sudan, as well as similar rail intended to ultimately connect starting from Tanzania, Kenya, and Uganda and moving towards Rwanda, Burundi, and the DRC).
China, Russia, and the rest of BRICS are actually providing financing without the strings attached that enslave countries as described in my prior comment- I’ll delve deeper into this (and all the rest) in a bit in later comments, though it might be a while from now. These loans are also with far better terms and the possibility (and a track record) of debt forgiveness where needed- incomparably superior to those provided by the west.
Going deeper into all this will be a process, so while I’ll be working on it here and there, I might also try to call out for assistance by making a megathread and requesting other 'grad posters chime in or something. But FWIW among the primary sources that I’ve been following for a while now to educate myself on all of the above- Geopolitical Economy Report and Prof. Wolff at Democracy at Work (as well as, admittedly, r/Sino) are great; while I’ve not read much of their works also, the Tricontinental is great and I’ve listened to a fair bit of Vijay Prashad’s stuff.
How does China and Russia differ?
Aight, for this one I’ll have to (re)look up several things for sourcing and I’ll reply in a more extensive fashion later as a result, but the gist of it (apart from the fact both nations obviously don’t resort to regime change at the drop of a hat, or at all- and actually negotiate towards win-win results) is-
both of these countries (and their corporations- which while still generally a mix of capitalist and state enterprise, are actually held accountable for their behavior by both respective states) support other nations’ attempts at securing sovereignty over their own natural resources (as western capital smears it- “resource nationalism”). Examples would include Indonesia’s raw copper export ban (and many others like it) aimed at moving up the value chain by moving the refining processes (and thus the value-added profits) into their own countries- and Niger raising their uranium royalties from €0.80/kg to a more market-accurate rate of €200/kg (basically stopping France’s free ride- many other countries are demanding renegotiations of “post-colonial” royalties agreements forced on them).
China and Russia are actually aiding in the development of value-added industries in the global south (factories, refineries, etc- including those that meet local needs, from solar panels, cars, concrete plants, etc), in the training and education of local populations (and various technology transfer programs) and in the development of infrastructure suited to local development and needs rather than neo-colonial resource exploitation. The various projects of the BRI is probably the best example of this, interconnecting countries across Africa and Eurasia, and facilitating regional trade and integration in regions (like pretty much all of Africa/Latin America) that have been made dependent on exporting to western countries prior. All over the world you see telecom infrastructure popping up in places the west had left barren- power plants, airports, decent roads and even at times railways leading to bumfuck-nowhere towns (as someone who has lived in bumfuck-nowhere towns myself), schools, sanitation infrastructure, etc… as well as the rise of domestic agriculture that meets local needs- and it’s not the west that is aiding with that. There are so many examples I could bring up, but China’s support in building Afghanistan’s first wholly owned photovoltaic factory (solar panels, basically) comes to mind- a stark difference compared to the decades of US occupation where they left the economy to the raw resource corporate bandits and tribal opium warlords. Russia meanwhile is building a nuclear power plant in Burkina Faso, which is negotiating a federation with Mali and Niger (two countries France has been looting for Uranium for decades). I could point to all sorts of similar infrastructure projects and agreements that primarily serve to meet domestic needs- high speed passenger rail connecting Java in Indonesia, rail lines connecting Ethiopia and in the works of extending to Kenya and South Sudan, as well as similar rail intended to ultimately connect starting from Tanzania, Kenya, and Uganda and moving towards Rwanda, Burundi, and the DRC).
China, Russia, and the rest of BRICS are actually providing financing without the strings attached that enslave countries as described in my prior comment- I’ll delve deeper into this (and all the rest) in a bit in later comments, though it might be a while from now. These loans are also with far better terms and the possibility (and a track record) of debt forgiveness where needed- incomparably superior to those provided by the west.
Going deeper into all this will be a process, so while I’ll be working on it here and there, I might also try to call out for assistance by making a megathread and requesting other 'grad posters chime in or something. But FWIW among the primary sources that I’ve been following for a while now to educate myself on all of the above- Geopolitical Economy Report and Prof. Wolff at Democracy at Work (as well as, admittedly, r/Sino) are great; while I’ve not read much of their works also, the Tricontinental is great and I’ve listened to a fair bit of Vijay Prashad’s stuff.
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