Last week in Cape Town, South Africa, I was a keynote speaker at the massive Mining Indaba conference, the premier annual gathering of global extractive companies involved in Africa's dominant economic sector. And the difference between the many military and aid conferences I've attended
on Africa and this international commodities convention
in Africa was telling. If you think most Americans now obsess over a "rising" China, you should know that we take a backseat to the Africans on this score. But whereas we often see China's rise as a potential threat, Africans see it as an opportunity, and China's "positive resource alliance" -- as another speaker put it -- is the primary reason why.
In my writings and speech-making around the planet, I have long portrayed China's rapid penetration of resource-rich developing economies as something both good (e.g., infrastructure enhancing)
and bad (e.g., done with little care for human rights and the environment) -- but, above all, inevitable. China's simultaneous industrialization, urbanization, modernization and globalization of its economy simply compel this vast outreach effort, characterized by the nation's stunning uptick in outward foreign direct investment flows. As one of the "last in" on globalization's bandwagon, China has naturally become an aggressive integrator of frontier economies. ...