By Samuel Ramani
On July 6, the Financial Times reported that Ukraine has become the largest corn
exporter to China, surpassing the United States. This was surprising, as
America has historically possessed a near-monopoly on corn exports to China.
Ukraine’s increased role in providing food for China also extends beyond corn.
Since the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea, Ukraine has increased its
agricultural trade with China by 56 percent.
That’s paradoxical. On the one hand, China has
not explicitly condemned Russian aggression in Ukraine. It has even tacitly rewarded
Russia for its anti-Western defiance by buying more Russian oil and gas, though
it has balanced those purchases with the expansion of energy contracts with
Central Asia. On the other hand, China has helped keep Ukraine’s war-ravaged
economy afloat with investment and trade. Chinese capital has contributed
greatly to the revival of Ukraine’s once-formidable agricultural sector.
Deeper analysis of China’s contradictory Ukraine
policy makes it clear that China’s strategy in the post-Soviet region is to remain
pragmatically non-aligned. China recognizes the benefits of balancing its trade
linkages with Russia and Ukraine, and is keen to embrace lower-cost imports
from Ukraine’s crisis-ridden economy. The fact that China is keeping its
diplomatic and economic strategies separate means that Ukraine can pivot
towards China to help rebuild itself economically from the ashes of war.
Chinese capital can facilitate the expansion of Ukraine’s growth industries
like information technology and real estate construction, in addition to making
China a reliable new market for Ukraine’s agricultural exports.
Ukraine’s pivot to China could also ease its
long-term economic dependence on Russia. Even though the countries are at war,
Russia remains Ukraine’s largest single trade partner. Increased Sino-Ukrainian
economic cooperation could also compensate for the West’s reluctance to offer
Ukraine large-scale economic assistance.
The conventional wisdom that the Ukraine
conflict has caused Russia and China to collude against the West is flawed.
Rather, Ukraine has become a site of economic competition between both great
powers instead of a basis for sustained strategic cooperation.
To explain this, I will provide historical
context for Ukraine’s rebalance towards China and extend my analysis from the
FT’s “corn diplomacy” argument to include real estate, information technology
and defense contracts.
A brief history of ties
between China and Ukraine
Ukraine’s increased economic linkages with China
began long before the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea. It started during
Viktor Yushchenko’s presidency (2004-2010), a period that has often been
described as the high-water mark for Ukraine’s ambitions for European
integration. In 2009, China provided aid for medical assistance devices during
the flu pandemic and proposed infrastructure projects like Kiev’s orbital road
and bridge building over the Dnipro River.
China’s expansion of economic ties to Ukraine
occurred right after the 2008 financial crisis, which caused a 15 percent GDP decline and 16.4 percent inflation in 2009. That may seem counterintuitive, but the
rationale for this policy was two-fold. First, the collapse of the Ukrainian
steel industry during the 2008 financial crisis made it clear that the country
had to return to its traditionally dominant export, agricultural products.
Simultaneously, increased Chinese demand for food brought that country closer
to Ukraine. Second, both Russia and the West were unwilling to provide economic
assistance for Ukraine, which gave China an unprecedented opportunity to gain
economic leverage over Ukraine. This expanded influence ensured that Ukraine
would be a useful actor on the Western fringe of China’s New Silk Road grand
design that aims to increase China’s geopolitical power by linking Eurasia
economically to South Asia and the Pacific region.
By the time Viktor Yanukovych gained power in
2010, Ukraine had become a theater of the Russia-China Great Game in Eurasia.
Yanukovych’s emphasis on closer relations with Russia initially complicated
China’s diplomatic overtures towards Ukraine. Nevertheless, China declared a
Sino-Ukrainian strategic partnership in 2011, expanding its investment in
infrastructure projects like the Kiev airport railway scheme.
This attempt failed miserably. The Diplomat’s Shannon Tiezzi reported in 2013 that China’s bilateral trade ties with Ukraine
declined by 0.5 percent from 2011 to 2012, in contrast to the 36 percent annual
growth recorded during Yushchenko’s presidency. Ukraine’s economic collapse and
soaring debt levels in the wake of Russia’s annexation of Crimea suggested that
China-Ukraine trade relations were entering a nadir.
That pessimistic view was wrong. Popular
protests brought down Yanukovych, who fled to Russia, triggering the Russian
invasion of Crimea and the current standoff. The outbreak of war brought in a
new Ukrainian president, Petro Poroshenko, who supported closer relations with
the EU and China to counter Russian aggression.
As a result, China gained the upper hand in the
Great Game for Ukraine. Even before the Maidan protests broke out in November
2013, China had declared its intention to rent and farm 5 percent of Ukraine’s land. After Russia invaded Crimea, Ukraine
steadily increased the scope of its agricultural deals with China.
China also invested significantly in other
sectors. In March 2015, China lent Ukraine $15 billion over 15 years, for housing construction to revive Ukraine’s
collapsing real estate market. Chinese economic ties to Ukraine have also
deepened in the aeronautics industry. On July 8, 2015, a first-ever
China-Ukraine forum on science and technology was announced confirming that China would
facilitate the expansion of Ukraine’s information technology sector, a crucial
growth industry for Ukraine’s cash-strapped economy.
Is Chinese investment good or
bad for the Ukrainians?
China’s increased investment in the Ukrainian
economy has been praised by many Kiev business elites. Oleg Prokhorenko, CEO of
UkrGasVydobuvanya gas company, told me in a recent interview that future
Chinese investment in Ukraine could resemble China’s deepened economic
cooperation with Belarus. In Belarus, China has underwritten five major
projects, ranging from hydrocarbon plants to an industrial park.
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