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The Maldives precarious tightrope between Chinese debt and sovereignty

International
The Maldives stands imperiled between the tantalizing promise of development under China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the lurking threat of crushing debt obligations eroding national sovereignty.

The Maldives stands imperiled between the tantalizing promise of development under China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the lurking threat of crushing debt obligations eroding national sovereignty. An objective assessment reveals the Muizzu administration’s short-sighted over-reliance on conditional Chinese financing for massive infrastructure projects is severely compromising the nation’s financial health and strategic autonomy.

With the finance ministry reporting a staggering $550 million budget deficit this year alone, the extent of the Maldives’ financial mess is apparent. Obligations of nearly $400 million in Chinese debt repayments due in 2024 and 2025, exceeding $1 billion in 2026, underscore the burden imposed by unrestrained BRI borrowings. Stopgap remedies like begging for emergency funds from China and the UAE while extending repayment deadlines on existing loans only delay the inevitable crisis.

The root of this debt trap lies in the unviable, bloated Chinese projects the Maldives has irrationally pursued without regard for sustainability or conditions. Statistics reveal Chinese loans are advanced at punitive rates as high as 6% with negligible economic benefits. The projects themselves, ranging from “Friendship Bridges” to airports, serve to absorb China’s surplus steel and concrete rather than serving local needs. Environmental impacts are discounted in the rush to implement. With no revenue generation potential, the projects only further sink the Maldives into the debt abyss.

The Maldives Finance Ministry is urgently seeking financial assistance totaling USD 550 million to address the state budget deficit. With debt payments looming at approximately USD 400 million each in 2024 and 2025, and exceeding USD 1 billion in 2026, the country faces significant financial strain. To mitigate this, Maldives has approached the Chinese Central Bank for a Currency Swap arrangement of USD 500 million and has also solicited an investment of USD 100 million from the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development in Maldivian Sovereign Bonds. Additionally, the government seeks an extension of the maturity date for a previous USD 100 million investment from the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development, stretching it to 2028 from the current deadline of 2026. President Muizzu himself has acknowledged the challenging months ahead and emphasizes the importance of making rational decisions grounded in factual analysis.

Even more worryingly, the debt dependence gives China immense political leverage due to the unconditional nature of these loans. The 2015 constitutional amendment allowing foreign land ownership functionally opens the gates for Chinese colonization under the guise of tourism, as seen in the proliferation of private Chinese-owned resorts. With strategic assets like the Hambantota port in Sri Lanka already casualties of debt-for-equity swaps, the risks of the Maldives losing sovereignty over lands or critical infrastructure to Chinese control lurks menacingly.

 

Domestically, the Muizzu regime’s spendthrift ways reflect utter indifference to the looming financial crisis. Grandiose populist announcements like extraterritorial expansion of health coverage and expensive drug imports from Europe despite cheap Indian options reveal an administration living far beyond the nation’s means. The creation of even more political patronage posts for cronies at a time of fiscal distress exposes the government’s appalling priorities.

The feckless splurging on vanity projects with borrowed Chinese funds has left the regime so cash-strapped it now delays critical social spending like police and military pay hikes. All the while, ordinary Maldivians find their real incomes being eroded by the appreciation of the Chinese Yuan and higher import costs due to weak local currency.

Evidently, China is aggressively employing its debt-trap diplomacy playbook in the Maldives to ensnare it in a cycle of unaffordable loans, thereby gaining control over strategic national assets and policy decisions. The myopic Muizzu regime has readily mortgaged the nation’s future for short-term political gains by living far beyond its means while tying the economy to Chinese debt servicing. The Maldives urgently needs a drastic rethink of its participation in BRI to avoid the looming debt-sovereignty trap. Granting China open access absent transparency, fiscal responsibility and environmental due diligence has imperiled the nation’s independence and prosperity. The Maldives must compartmentalize BRI collaboration strictly around national requirements, not Chinese interests.

Multilateral partnerships leveraging Indian and Western collaborations focused on long-term capacity building should be prioritized over unsustainable Chinese vanity projects. Tough action on corruption and patronage politics is required to allocate resources rationally towards productive investments, exports and social services instead of misguided mega-projects. Restoring fiscal discipline and financial oversight is essential to claw back from the brink of Chinese debt servitude.

At this critical juncture, the Maldives risks losing its hard-won democracy and sovereignty if it continues sleepwalking into financial disaster and Chinese dominance merely to profit corrupt political elites. Only by opening its eyes to the stark realities of its policy missteps and indebtedness can the nation salvage its independence and future prosperity. The Maldivian people deserve real development with dignity, not merely the illusion of progress at the cost of falling into Greater China’s orbit.

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