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Journal Article

Tracking Underreported Financial Flows: China's Development Finance and the Aid-Conflict Nexus Revisited

Authors

  • Strange
  • A.M.
  • Dreher
  • A.
  • Fuchs
  • A.
  • Parks
  • B.
  • Tierney
  • M.J.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1177/0022002715604363

JEL Classification

F35 O19 O22

Key Words

Africa

China

civil war

Development financing

foreign aid

non-DAC donors

South-South Cooperation

Related Topics

International Finance

Globalization

Emerging Markets & Developing Countries

China

Africa

China’s provision of development finance to other countries is sizable but reliable information is scarce. We introduce a new open-source methodology for collecting project-level development finance information and create a database of Chinese official finance (OF) to Africa from 2000 to 2011. We find that China’s commitments amounted to approximately US$73 billion, of which US$15 billion are comparable to Official Development Assistance following Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development definitions. We provide details on 1,511 projects to fifty African countries. We use this database to extend previous research on aid and conflict, which suffers from omitted-variable bias due to the exclusion of Chinese development finance. Our results show that sudden withdrawals of “traditional” aid no longer induce conflict in the presence of sufficient alternative funding from China. Our findings highlight the importance of gathering more complete data on the development activities of “nontraditional donors” to better understand the link between aid and conflict.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Prof. Dr. Andreas Fuchs
    Kiel Institute Researcher
  • Dr. Bradley Parks
    Executive Director of AidData research lab, The College of William & Mary

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    International Trade

Research Center

  • International Development