The analysis of China's development policy marks the start of a series of publications in which the role and approaches of non-traditional donors in development cooperation are analysed.
The People's Republic of China is using the instrument of development cooperation in a targeted manner to promote and assert its own global interests, and with ever-increasing resources. In contrast to western donor countries, China, as a non-member of the OECD Development Committee (DAC), is not bound by its standards. Western actors, for example, criticize the opacity of Chinese development cooperation. While the Chinese approach is offering developing countries an alternative partnership that is not based on Western values, but – officially – the principles of South-South cooperation, China’s development activities also entail risks for partner countries, for example with regard to debt sustainability.
Our China expert Heiko Herold explains the principles, priorities and developments that shape Chinese development policy and what this means for German development cooperation.
Read the entire monitor here as a PDF.
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About this series
The Monitor series deals with one main topic at a time from the perspective of KAS experts and places it in the political and social context on the basis of a few key points.
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The contributions appear exclusively online and can therefore not be ordered.
The current main topics are “Development policy”, “Sustainability” and “Election and social research”. The contributions of these sub-series are presented for you on separate overview pages in addition to the overall series.