Political economy of Sino-African infrastructural engagement: the internationalisation of Chinese state-owned companies in Kenya
View/ Open
Gambino2022.pdf (3.229Mb)
Date
21/03/2022Item status
Restricted AccessEmbargo end date
21/03/2023Author
Gambino, Elisa
Gambino, Ellie
Metadata
Abstract
Since the turn of the 21st century, the development of infrastructure on the African continent has
assumed a prominent role in national, regional, and continental developmental agendas. The
increasing focus on infrastructural development in Africa has coincided with a push towards
internationalisation given by the Chinese government, in an attempt to address the national
overcapacity crisis. As such, Sino-African infrastructural development is a process influenced by
many Chinese and African actors, which cannot be reduced to 'China' and 'Africa'. The
fragmented nature of the relations amongst the Chinese state and its state-owned companies
echoes in their overseas engagement, which, in turn, is (re)shaped by the agency of African actors
and their (diverging) agendas. Nevertheless, these two aspects of Sino-African infrastructural
engagement have rarely been put in conversation. Through the lens of embeddedness, this thesis
explores the multi-layered dynamics amongst the actors involved in the development of Sino-African infrastructure. This research is based on qualitative data collected through semi-structured
interviews, textual analysis, and ethnographic observations conducted during extensive fieldwork
research in Kenya and China. The thesis draws from the case of Lamu port in Northern Kenya - financed by the Kenyan government and built by the Chinese state-owned contractor China Road
Bridge Corporation ² and other Chinese-built and Chinese-funded projects in Kenya, and beyond,
to explore the intersection of different trajectories in the development of Sino-African
infrastructure projects. Throughout the decades of economic reforms, Chinese state-owned
companies have gained substantial autonomy with regards to their overseas activities, and the quest
for market expansion is thus closely linked to the companies' embeddedness in the contexts in which they operate. The reframing of Kenya's political economy around infrastructural
development is conducive to the spatial expansion of Chinese companies, but also to the
profiteering of Kenyan political and business elites. As infrastructure gains political prominence,
it also becomes yet another site for contestation and dispossession, highlighting the proliferation
of African actors and their diverging agendas. This thesis argues that the internationalisation of
Chinese state-owned companies in Africa is not only reliant on spatial expansion through Chinese state incentives, but also on market expansion through non-Chinese funded business opportunities.