China-led multilateral bank takes key step forward

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  • AIIB will start operation at year end under preconditions that at least 10 prospective members sign agreement, and initial subscribed capital is no less than 50 percent of authorised capital

 

With the signing of an agreement that outlines the legal framework and management structure for the institution, the China-initiated multilateral bank that has dominated media headlines for months took a key step forward on Monday.

The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) was proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in October 2013. A year later, 21 Asian nations, including China, India, Malaysia, Pakistan and Singapore, had signed an agreement to establish the bank, which will be headquartered in Beijing.

Representatives of the 57 prospective founding countries including Pakistan gathered in Beijing for the signing ceremony of the AIIB in the Great Hall of the People. Australia was the first country to sign the document.

The 60-article agreement specified each member’s share as well as the governance structure and policy-making mechanism of the bank which is designed to finance infrastructure in Asia.

The bank will have authorised capital of $100 billion and Asian countries will contribute up to 75 percent of the total capital. Each member will be allocated a share of the quota based on their economic size, according to the agreement.

China, India and Russia are the three largest shareholders, taking a 30.34 percent, 8.52 percent, 6.66 percent stake respectively. Their voting shares are calculated at 26.06 percent, 7.5 percent and 5.92 percent.

China’s Vice Finance Minister Shi Yaobin said in an interview with Xinhua that the country’s stake and voting share in the initial stage are “natural outcome” of current rules and may be diluted as more members join. “China is not deliberately seeking a veto power,” Shi stressed.

Speaking at Monday’s ceremony, Finance Minister Lou Jiwei said the new bank will uphold high standards and follow international rules in its operation, policy-making and management to ensure efficiency and transparency.

Since the new bank garnered support from countries like Britain and Germany, much focus has been trained on whether the US and Japan, the world’s largest and third largest economies, will join the club.

While stating that the US will not join the AIIB at present, US President Barack Obama said in April that the US looked forward to collaborating with the new development bank, “just like we do with the Asia Development Bank (ADB) and with the World Bank (WB).”

Despite outside worries that a new investment bank will challenge the established order of multilateral lenders, the IMF, WB and other leading global lenders have welcomed collaboration with the new bank to fill Asia’s infrastructure gap.

Statistics from the ADB show that between 2010 and 2020, around $ 8 trillion in investment will be needed in the Asia-Pacific region to improve infrastructure.

Rather than being a competitor, the new bank will complement the current international economic order and enable China to take more global responsibility, Chinese officials have reiterated.

The bank will start operation at the end of the year under two preconditions: At least 10 prospective members sign the agreement, and the initial subscribed capital is no less than 50 percent of the authorised capital.