Why the Chinese Are Not on a Land-Buying Spree in Africa

The Western and African media have long fueled the myth that Chinese investors are buying up vast tracts of land across Africa as part of some neo-colonial plan to export food back to China. Professor Ian Scoones from the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex joins us to discuss why Chinese engagement in African agriculture is not what it seems.
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Workers watch as a truck unloads land at a ShanDong ZhongJiao Navigation Engineering Co. construction site as a new port is built near Boke, Guinea, on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015. Building the port only took about eight months and allowed China Hongqiao Group Ltd.s project to start shipping in July. Photographer: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Workers watch as a truck unloads land at a ShanDong ZhongJiao Navigation Engineering Co. construction site as a new port is built near Boke, Guinea, on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015. Building the port only took about eight months and allowed China Hongqiao Group Ltd.s project to start shipping in July. Photographer: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Western and African media have long fueled the myth that Chinese investors are buying up vast tracts of land across Africa as part of some neo-colonial plan to export food back to China. Sure, on one level, the theory appears plausible: China has around 20 percent of the world's population but only about 7 percent of the planet's arable land, so it seems obvious that Beijing might look abroad in search of farmland to feed its people. There's only one small problem. That premise, no matter how convincing it may sound, is just flat-out wrong.

Johns Hopkins University professor Deborah Brautigam detailed all of the reasons why this myth remains so durable in her 2015 book "Will Africa Feed China?" A lot of it, according to Brautigam, has to do with a mix of bad journalism, Western narratives of African victimization and the Chinese themselves who oversell their ambitions in Africans.

Now, though, there's a twist to the story. Not only are the Chinese not on a land-buying spree in Africa, it appears they are actually doing more to support African agricultural development than any other country in the world.

Professor Ian Scoones from the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex recently completed a four-country research project into Chinese agricultural engagement in Africa and discovered that the combination of Chinese immigrant farmers in Africa, along with the deployment of Chinese agricultural technology and PRC government training programs that have brought some 10,000 African officials to China, have all had a remarkably positive impact on Africa's struggling agricultural sector. Professor Scoones joins Eric & Cobus -- in the podcast above -- to discuss why Chinese engagement in African agriculture is not what it seems.

Watch Eric Olander discuss U.S. and Chinese competition for influence in Africa on HuffPost Live:

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