Goodwill and Hard Bargains: The DRC, China and India

Image: Flickr, Grey World
Image: Flickr, Grey World

The economic and political engagement of China and India with the African continent is growing, but the complex dynamics of this engagement, particularly at country-specific level, remain under-researched.

This study explores historical, political and economic aspects of India and China’s relationship with the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). It first traces the historical development of China and India’s political and trade relations with the DRC from the 1950s to the present day. There follows specific consideration of Indian and Chinese involvement in mining, construction, finance, and telecommunications. The study shows that while Indian and Chinese business and governments are both significant drivers of growth in the DRC, the nature of their engagement differs substantially. Significantly, unlike its Indian counterpart, the Chinese government facilitates access by Chinese state-owned companies to large mining deposits in the DRC through loans from the state-owned Export-Import Bank. In the telecommunications sector, however, the most successful Chinese company, Huawei Technologies, receives no noticeable state assistance.

Meanwhile India’s Bharti has become the DRC’s biggest telecommunications investor and operator. Politically, China has positioned itself as a close ally of President Joseph Kabila while India, the main troop contributor to the UN mission to the DRC, has a more strained relationship. The study concludes that China and India’s role in delivering infrastructural development to the DRC is welcome, but that projects required continued and careful scrutiny by civil society and the country’s democratic institutions.

The views expressed in this publication/article are those of the author/s and do not necessarily reflect the views of the South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA).