China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?

China and the United States are among the most important external stakeholders in Africa’s peace, security, and prosperity. The African continent, with some of the world’s fastest-growing economies, an expanding consumer base, and an exploding youth population, has recently witnessed intensifying Ch...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lei Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: World Century Publishing Corporation 2020-01-01
Series:China Quarterly of International Strategic Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.worldscientific.com/doi/epdf/10.1142/S2377740020500037
id doaj-62a0a58cc23f479b8808e92b563592b2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-62a0a58cc23f479b8808e92b563592b22021-01-04T02:01:02ZengWorld Century Publishing CorporationChina Quarterly of International Strategic Studies2377-74002377-74192020-01-016112314110.1142/S237774002050003710.1142/S2377740020500037China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?Lei Wang0A2 Wanshousi, Haidian, Beijing 100081, ChinaChina and the United States are among the most important external stakeholders in Africa’s peace, security, and prosperity. The African continent, with some of the world’s fastest-growing economies, an expanding consumer base, and an exploding youth population, has recently witnessed intensifying China-U.S. competition. In economic and trade terms, the United States is playing catch-up as Beijing has long ago overtaken Washington as the continent’s largest trading partner and investor. While China regards Africa’s adherence to the “One China” principle as the only political prerequisite for its engagement with the continent, the United States views greater democracy and rule of law in Africa as in the best interests of both. China’s security presence in Africa pales in comparison with that of the United States, as Washington boasts an extensive network of military bases on the continent while Beijing’s peace and security engagement mainly involves multilateral UN peacekeeping operations and bilateral security cooperation, such as arms sales and training programs. However, growing China-U.S. competition does not necessarily crowd out shared interests or preclude closer coordination in specific areas, for example, market development, infrastructure building, anti-piracy, health capacity-building, and so on. By fending off a senseless ideological contest, respecting each other’s core interests in Africa, accommodating Africans’ development aspirations and security concerns, Beijing and Washington can find more common ground than many believe.http://www.worldscientific.com/doi/epdf/10.1142/S2377740020500037africachina-u.s. relationscompetitiontrilateral cooperation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lei Wang
spellingShingle Lei Wang
China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?
China Quarterly of International Strategic Studies
africa
china-u.s. relations
competition
trilateral cooperation
author_facet Lei Wang
author_sort Lei Wang
title China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?
title_short China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?
title_full China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?
title_fullStr China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?
title_full_unstemmed China and the United States in Africa: Competition or Cooperation?
title_sort china and the united states in africa: competition or cooperation?
publisher World Century Publishing Corporation
series China Quarterly of International Strategic Studies
issn 2377-7400
2377-7419
publishDate 2020-01-01
description China and the United States are among the most important external stakeholders in Africa’s peace, security, and prosperity. The African continent, with some of the world’s fastest-growing economies, an expanding consumer base, and an exploding youth population, has recently witnessed intensifying China-U.S. competition. In economic and trade terms, the United States is playing catch-up as Beijing has long ago overtaken Washington as the continent’s largest trading partner and investor. While China regards Africa’s adherence to the “One China” principle as the only political prerequisite for its engagement with the continent, the United States views greater democracy and rule of law in Africa as in the best interests of both. China’s security presence in Africa pales in comparison with that of the United States, as Washington boasts an extensive network of military bases on the continent while Beijing’s peace and security engagement mainly involves multilateral UN peacekeeping operations and bilateral security cooperation, such as arms sales and training programs. However, growing China-U.S. competition does not necessarily crowd out shared interests or preclude closer coordination in specific areas, for example, market development, infrastructure building, anti-piracy, health capacity-building, and so on. By fending off a senseless ideological contest, respecting each other’s core interests in Africa, accommodating Africans’ development aspirations and security concerns, Beijing and Washington can find more common ground than many believe.
topic africa
china-u.s. relations
competition
trilateral cooperation
url http://www.worldscientific.com/doi/epdf/10.1142/S2377740020500037
work_keys_str_mv AT leiwang chinaandtheunitedstatesinafricacompetitionorcooperation
_version_ 1724349971756482560