China's loans to Latin America 'rose to $22bn in 2014'
- Published

China lent Brazil more than $8bn in 2014, according to new figures released on Thursday
Loans by China's state-owned banks to Latin American countries rose by 71% to $22bn (£14bn) in 2014, according to estimates published by the China-Latin America Finance Database.
The figure is the second largest on record for Chinese lending in Latin America, according to the report.
The Chinese loans exceed the combined worth of those by the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank, the authors say.
Brazil alone received $8.6bn, they say.
It was followed by Argentina with $7bn, Venezuela with $5.7bn and Ecuador with $821m, according to the report , externalby US think-tank Inter-American Dialogue and Boston University's Global Economic Government Initiative.
Report authors Kevin P Gallagher and Margaret Myers say Chinese finance is particularly popular with Latin American governments because it "comes with few strings attached".
"China may tacitly require that Chinese companies have a hand in some projects, but has avoided meddling in domestic policy," they write.
However, they warn that China's mounting financial commitments to the region also carry considerable risk.
"China is heavily invested in countries with poor credit ratings and a history of default," they say.
Since 2007, Chinese state banks have loaned Venezuela more than $50bn, which the Latin American nation has invested in mining, energy, infrastructure and housing projects.

Chinese lending to Latin America
2014: $22.1bn
2013: $12.9bn
2012: $3.8bn
2011: $17.8bn
2010: $37bn

Venezuela's socialist President, Nicolas Maduro, travelled to China in early January to ask for more funding as the Latin American nation faced a worsening economic crisis triggered by falling oil prices.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro went on a charm offensive to secure more Chinese investment
Upon his return, Mr Maduro told state media he had secured $20bn.
But with prices for Venezuelan oil almost half of what they were six months ago, this may have been less than the Venezuelan leader had hoped for and not enough to make up the shortfall, analysts say.
Chinese finance is key for a number of infrastructure programmes in Latin America, including an upgrade of the underground in the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires, and road building in Ecuador.
The report's authors predict that if Chinese pledges for further infrastructure projects come to fruition, China's investment in 2015 could beat the 2010 high of $37bn.
- Published27 January 2015
- Published9 January 2015