Analysis
How China Reinvented the BRI: Western Tariffs Accelerated Its Transformation Into a Sophisticated Extension of China’s Industrial Policy
There is a particular kind of policy failure that announces itself quietly—not with a crisis, but with a statistic that arrives too late to matter. For Western capitals still congratulating themselves on having exposed the “debt-trap diplomacy” of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, that statistic arrived in early 2025: $213.5 billion. That is the total value of BRI engagement last year, the highest figure ever recorded, driven by $128.4 billion in construction contracts and $85.2 billion in investments, according to the definitive annual tracking report by the Green Finance & Development Center at Fudan University and the Griffith Asia Institute.
The West had been writing the BRI’s obituary for years. It turns out the patient wasn’t dying—it was in surgery, emerging leaner, smarter, and considerably more dangerous to ignore.
This is the story of how China reinvented the BRI, and why the transformation is Beijing’s most consequential geopolitical pivot since Deng Xiaoping told his country to hide its strength and bide its time. Except now, China isn’t hiding anything.
From Debt-Trap Fears to Industrial Powerhouse: The Narrative That Aged Poorly
Cast your mind back to 2018. Western think-tanks were publishing breathless reports about “debt-trap diplomacy.” The IMF was warning about unsustainable Chinese loans. Hambantota port in Sri Lanka had become shorthand for everything allegedly predatory about the BRI. American officials quietly believed the initiative would collapse under its own contradictions—bad loans, political backlash, COVID disruptions, and the rising chorus of recipient-country grievances would do what sanctions could not.
Some of that critique was legitimate. Early BRI lending was frequently opaque, environmentally careless, and calibrated more toward Chinese state-owned construction firms than the development needs of host countries. AidData’s landmark 2021 research documented “hidden debt” problems in dozens of countries and found that a significant share of projects generated local frustration.
But here is where the Western analysis went badly wrong: it assumed Beijing would respond to criticism the way a Western institution might—with retrenchment, reform panels, and lengthy consultations. Instead, China did something far more strategically coherent. It quietly dismantled the version of the BRI that was failing and replaced it with one calibrated for a new era of great-power competition.
The result? While the West debated whether the BRI was dead, China’s total foreign trade hit approximately $6.4 trillion in 2024, with a historic trade surplus of roughly $1.19–1.2 trillion—figures reported by Reuters that would have seemed fantastical just a decade ago. The BRI isn’t a side project anymore. It is the arterial system through which that surplus finds its geopolitical purpose.
Tariffs as Catalyst: The 2025 Rebound Numbers Tell a Specific Story
The conventional wisdom holds that Western tariffs—Biden’s chips restrictions, the EU’s EV duties, Trump’s sweeping trade barriers—put China on the defensive. The 2025 BRI data suggests exactly the opposite dynamic: tariffs functioned as an accelerant, forcing Beijing to accelerate the very industrial-policy upgrades the BRI now embodies.
Consider the logic. When Washington raised tariffs on Chinese goods and Brussels slapped duties on Chinese EVs, it created an immediate problem for China’s manufacturing export machine: where do the goods go? The answer, executed with characteristic patience, was to restructure the BRI not just as a market for Chinese exports, but as a platform for relocating Chinese production—or at least assembly—to tariff-exempt or tariff-advantaged third countries.
This is BRI supply chain rerouting tariffs in practice, not theory. Chinese firms, particularly in solar, EVs, and batteries, have been quietly establishing manufacturing footholds in BRI partner countries—Morocco, Indonesia, Hungary, Uzbekistan, Ethiopia—that enjoy preferential trade access to Western markets. The BRI’s infrastructure investments, once mocked as vanity ports and empty highways, now serve as the backbone for this industrial relocation strategy.
Key 2025 data points from the GFDC/Griffith report:
- $128.4 billion in construction contracts—the single largest component, reflecting continued hard-infrastructure buildout, now increasingly in energy and digital sectors
- $85.2 billion in direct investments—up sharply, and skewed toward manufacturing and green-tech rather than traditional ports and roads
- Africa and Central Asia led in project volume; Latin America showed the most dramatic investment value growth
- The private sector—companies like LONGi Green Energy, CATL, and East Hope Group—now drives a meaningful share of BRI deals, replacing the lumbering state-owned enterprises of the initiative’s first decade
That last point deserves emphasis. The shift from SOE-dominated lending to private-sector industrial investment is arguably the single most important structural change in the BRI’s reinvention. It is also the change that Western policymakers have been slowest to register.
The New BRI Playbook: Minerals, Green Tech, and Friends-with-Benefits Deals
If the old BRI was about concrete—ports, roads, pipelines, stadiums—the new BRI is about control of the materials and technologies that will define the next economic epoch. Three interlocking strategies define what might be called Beijing’s BRI 2.0 playbook.
First: Critical minerals security. China already refines the lion’s share of the world’s lithium, cobalt, nickel, and rare earths. The new BRI deepens this advantage by securing upstream supply through investment and long-term offtake agreements with mining countries across Africa (DRC, Zimbabwe, Zambia), Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan), and Latin America (Chile, Bolivia, Argentina’s lithium triangle). This isn’t charity—it’s vertical integration on a geopolitical scale. When Western nations talk about “friend-shoring” critical mineral supply chains, they are largely scrambling to catch up with arrangements China has been cementing through BRI frameworks for years.
Second: Green-tech export platforms. The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and American clean-energy subsidies under the IRA were designed, partly, to create a market for Western green technology. Beijing read the same signals and moved faster. Chinese solar manufacturers, EV producers, and battery firms are using BRI partner countries as manufacturing hubs and as captive markets simultaneously. LONGi is building solar panel factories in the Middle East and Southeast Asia; CATL is establishing battery plants in Hungary and Morocco; East Hope is processing aluminium in Southeast Asia using cheaper regional energy. The BRI corridor isn’t just a trade route—it’s a China Belt and Road industrial policy shift writ in gigawatts and gigafactories.
Third: De-dollarization infrastructure. This is the most contested element, but it is real and accelerating. An increasing share of BRI transactions are settled in renminbi or via bilateral currency arrangements. The digital yuan—e-CNY—is being piloted in several BRI corridors. This is not imminent dollar displacement, but it is the patient construction of an alternative plumbing system for global finance, one that could matter enormously in a future sanctions scenario. The Council on Foreign Relations’ BRI backgrounder notes the financial architecture of the BRI as one of its most underappreciated dimensions.
What This Means for the Global South—and the West
The Global South’s relationship with the new BRI is more complicated than either its cheerleaders or its critics admit.
On one hand, recipient countries are more sophisticated than they were in 2013. Governments in Africa, Southeast Asia, and Latin America have watched the Hambantota cautionary tale; many now negotiate harder, demand local employment provisions, and push back on terms that seem tilted too heavily toward Chinese interests. The South China Morning Post has documented a genuine evolution in BRI deal structures—shorter loan tenors, more equity-participation arrangements, greater (if still imperfect) attention to environmental standards.
On the other hand, the fundamental power asymmetry remains. China offers something no other actor currently provides at scale: the combination of capital, construction capacity, and market access in a single package. The EU’s Global Gateway initiative—announced with considerable fanfare as the Western answer to the BRI—has pledged €300 billion through 2027, but disbursement has been slow, governance conditions can be onerous for developing-nation governments, and it cannot match China’s speed of project execution. Foreign Policy’s recent analysis captures the frustration among Global South policymakers who find Western alternatives rhetorically appealing but operationally disappointing.
This creates a dynamic that the West has not adequately grappled with: the BRI rebound 2025 is not primarily a story about Chinese aggression—it is a story about a vacuum the West has failed to fill. Countries that might prefer Western investment are accepting Chinese terms not because they love Beijing, but because the alternative is waiting indefinitely for funds that never quite materialize.
The geopolitical implications compound. Every BRI manufacturing hub established in a third country is a potential hedge against Western market access for that country. Every critical-mineral offtake agreement is a node in a supply chain that circumvents Western leverage. Every e-CNY transaction is a small withdrawal from the dollar’s gravitational pull. Individually, these are manageable. Aggregated over a decade, they constitute a structural shift in global economic architecture.
Why the BRI Is Now “Tariff-Proof”—And a Model for 21st-Century Industrial Statecraft
Here is the contrarian argument that Western analysts need to sit with: Western tariffs didn’t weaken China—they handed Beijing the perfect excuse to upgrade the BRI from concrete to competitive advantage.
The tariff pressure of 2018–2025 forced Chinese industrial policy to become more sophisticated. Firms that might have been content to export finished goods from home factories were pushed—by tariffs, by the risk of further escalation—to internationalize their production. The BRI provided the geographic framework, the infrastructure, and increasingly the regulatory and financial architecture to make that internationalization possible.
The result is a version of the BRI that is, paradoxically, more resilient to Western pressure than its predecessor. When the BRI was primarily about loans and construction contracts, Western pressure could target Chinese banks and state firms. Now that private Chinese industrial companies are the driving force, using locally incorporated entities, partnering with third-country firms, and settling deals in non-dollar currencies, the leverage points are harder to identify and harder to squeeze.
This is what makes the China BRI 2025 moment genuinely novel: it represents the emergence of a model for 21st-century industrial statecraft that Western nations don’t have a clear answer to. It blends state strategy with private-sector execution, hard infrastructure with technology transfer, financial architecture with trade facilitation—all in service of a coherent industrial-policy vision that links domestic manufacturing capacity to overseas market and resource access.
The Economist has noted that China’s approach to industrial policy has grown more sophisticated precisely under the pressure of Western countermeasures—a dynamic that mirrors historical cases where external pressure accelerated rather than retarded technological development.
What the West Should Do Differently: A Pragmatic Agenda
Diagnosis without prescription is just complaint. Here is what a more effective Western response might look like.
Stop celebrating the BRI’s supposed failures. Every time a Western think-tank declares the BRI dead and China proves otherwise, Western credibility takes a quiet hit in exactly the capitals that matter most. Accurate threat assessment is the prerequisite for effective strategy.
Accelerate Global Gateway and PGI disbursement—radically. The Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (G7’s answer to BRI) and the EU’s Global Gateway need to move from pledges to projects at Chinese speeds. This requires cutting bureaucratic timelines, accepting more risk, and being willing to fund imperfect projects in imperfect countries. Development finance cannot be held to standards that make it functionally unavailable.
Compete on the private sector, not just the public sector. China’s most powerful new BRI instrument is private industry—CATL, LONGi, Huawei—backed by state industrial policy but operating with commercial agility. Western governments need to find ways to mobilize their own private sectors into developing-world markets at scale, through blended finance, risk guarantees, and trade facilitation that makes it commercially viable for Western firms to compete where Chinese firms currently dominate.
Engage on critical minerals with genuine urgency. The window to build alternative supply chains for lithium, cobalt, and rare earths is narrowing with each new BRI offtake agreement signed. The World Bank’s minerals framework provides useful architecture; what’s missing is the political will to fund it at the necessary scale.
Stop treating the Global South as a passive audience. The most effective counter-BRI strategy is not to badmouth the BRI—it is to offer recipient countries genuine choices. That means engaging with their actual development priorities, not just Western strategic preferences. Countries that feel they have real alternatives are countries that will negotiate harder with Beijing. Countries that feel they have no choice will sign whatever China puts in front of them.
The View from 2030
Project forward five years. If current trajectories hold, the BRI will have established a durable manufacturing and supply-chain ecosystem across Africa, Central Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America—one calibrated to Chinese industrial priorities, financed through diversified instruments, and partially insulated from Western financial pressure. The critical-minerals supply chains feeding China’s green-tech export machine will be deeper and harder to disrupt. The renminbi’s role in trade settlement will be meaningfully larger, if not yet dominant.
This is not inevitable. China faces real headwinds: domestic economic stress, growing recipient-country pushback on debt and local employment, competition from India and middle powers in specific corridors, and the possibility that some of its industrial bets—particularly in green tech—will be disrupted by technology shifts it doesn’t control.
But the West’s continued tendency to misread the BRI—to see it as a failing initiative rather than an evolving strategic instrument—makes the pessimistic scenario more likely. How China reinvented the BRI is not just an economic story. It is a masterclass in strategic adaptation under pressure, executed by a state that is patient, pragmatic, and playing a longer game than its rivals typically recognize.
The $213.5 billion that moved through BRI channels in 2025 is not a number. It is a signal. The question is whether Washington, Brussels, and London are finally ready to read it correctly.
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Analysis
Malaysia Bets Its 2026 on “Execution” — And the Semiconductor Upcycle Is Doing the Heavy Lifting
Malaysia’s government has declared 2026 a year of “execution” and “discipline” as the Anwar Ibrahim administration races to deliver on the 13th Malaysia Plan (RMK13) ahead of elections that could come as early as February 2028, according to Fortune’s interview with economy minister Akmal Nasrullah Mohd Nasir.
A Strong Base to Build From
Malaysia’s economy grew 4.9% in 2025 following 5.1% growth the year before, with unemployment falling to 2.9% — the lowest in a decade — and the ringgit trading at its strongest level in five years. HSBC’s ASEAN economist Yun Liu forecasts 4.6% growth for 2026, citing strength in electrical equipment manufacturing, tourism, and sound government policy, while Nomura economists have projected an even more bullish 5.2%, pointing to infrastructure spending under RMK13.
The ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO) projects growth moderating slightly to 4.6% from an estimated 4.9% in 2025, describing Malaysia’s performance as reflecting its “entrenched position in global semiconductor and electronics value chains” and the broader global tech upcycle, according to AMRO’s assessment of Malaysia’s investment upcycle.
Navigating Washington Without Picking Sides
Malaysia’s trade relationship with the US has been turbulent. Washington imposed 25% tariffs on Malaysian goods in April 2025, rattling the country’s export-led economy, before a deal reduced US duties to 19% in exchange for Malaysia lowering tariffs on select American products, with exemptions carved out for aviation components and electrical equipment. Malaysia’s trade hit a record high of more than 3 trillion ringgit (roughly $780 billion) last year despite the friction.
Deputy finance minister Liew Chin Tong has framed Malaysia’s positioning explicitly around neutrality: the country is “not China, not the US,” a stance he argues gives Malaysia a strategic advantage in both geopolitical and supply-chain terms, according to Fortune’s reporting from the Forum Ekonomi Malaysia summit.
Capital Is Flowing In — From Everywhere
Malaysia recorded 22.8 billion ringgit (about $5.8 billion) in foreign direct investment in the first quarter of 2026, a 6.0% year-on-year increase, moderating from the prior quarter’s 48.7% surge. Inflows into information and communication technology services remained particularly strong, with China, Hong Kong, and Singapore serving as the primary capital sources, according to McKinsey’s Southeast Asia quarterly economic review. Bank Negara Malaysia has held its policy rate steady following a pre-emptive 25 basis-point cut in July 2025, with headline inflation projected to average just 2.0% in 2026.
The Long Game: Semiconductors, Rare Earths, and Nuclear Power
Beyond RMK13’s near-term targets, Malaysian officials are positioning the country’s industrial strategy around decades, not years. Minister Akmal has reiterated commitments to eliminate coal use by 2044 and reach net zero by 2050, while confirming Malaysia is actively “exploring the potential” of nuclear power to meet the energy demands of its expanding data-center and semiconductor sectors. AMRO’s structural policy guidance urges Malaysia to develop domestic semiconductor and rare-earth capabilities as a hedge against ongoing US-China “geoeconomic fracturing,” positioning the country as a trusted neutral hub for global manufacturers diversifying away from concentrated exposure to either superpower.
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Analysis
Canada’s Central Bank Holds the Line at 2.25% as Tariffs and a Middle East Oil Shock Collide
The Bank of Canada has maintained its policy rate at 2.25% for a consecutive meeting, navigating a rare combination of tariff-driven trade disruption and Middle East-driven energy inflation that is squeezing the economy from two directions at once, according to the Bank of Canada’s June 2026 rate announcement.
A Soft Economy Absorbing Two Shocks
Canadian GDP edged down 0.1% in the first quarter, weaker than the Bank’s April projection, even as global equity markets stayed buoyant and the Canadian dollar weakened against its US counterpart. Governing Council says it will “look through” the near-term inflation impact of the Middle East conflict but will not allow higher energy prices to become entrenched, a distinction the Bank has drawn explicitly to avoid repeating the policy mistakes of the 2021-22 inflation surge, per the Bank’s official statement.
The Bank’s April Monetary Policy Report forecasts GDP growth of just 1.2% in 2026, rising to 1.6% in 2027, as exports and business investment recover only gradually from a US tariff regime the Bank now treats as a structural, not cyclical, feature of the outlook, according to the Bank of Canada’s April 2026 report.
The Tariff Toll So Far
RBC Economics estimates the US has imposed a roughly 6% average effective tariff rate on Canadian exports, with most trade remaining exempt under CUSMA compliance rules, based on RBC’s structural-damage assessment. Steel, aluminum, and auto exports have declined sharply, while other sectors have proven more resilient than initially feared. HSB Pricing Lab research conducted with Bank of Canada staff found roughly a quarter of Canada’s own retaliatory tariff costs passed through to consumer prices before being rapidly unwound once most retaliatory measures were lifted.
The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) review is, in the words of Desjardins Group economists, “the defining issue” of 2026 for Canadian policy, with FTSE Russell analysts suggesting the agreement is unlikely to survive in its current form even as the broader global trading system adapts around it, according to Yahoo Finance Canada’s economist survey.
Structural Damage, Not Just a Cyclical Dip
Bank of Canada officials have been unusually direct about the long-run cost of trade disruption. The Bank’s own commentary describes Canada’s potential output growth falling to roughly 1.0% in 2026 before a modest recovery to 1.3% in 2027, driven by both trade friction and slower population growth from reduced immigration, according to the Bank of Canada’s “Structural change” commentary. The labour market remains soft, with unemployment in the 6.5%–7% range reflecting weak hiring rather than mass layoffs — what Indeed Canada economist Brendon Bernard describes as a “low-hire, low-fire” dynamic.
Watching the Same AI Risk From Ottawa
Notably, the Bank of Canada’s own risk assessment flags the same concern now dominating global financial commentary: a “sudden tightening in global financial conditions sparked by a correction in AI related stock market valuations” as a distinct downside risk to its inflation projections, according to RBC’s analysis of the Bank’s scenario planning. That makes Canada one of the first G7 central banks to formally embed AI-valuation risk into its published monetary policy framework.
The Bank’s next rate decision and full Monetary Policy Report are due July 15, 2026.
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Analysis
Pakistan IMF Deal 2026: Third Review Cleared, Budget 2026-27 and Inflation Outlook
The International Monetary Fund’s Executive Board has completed the third review of Pakistan’s Extended Fund Facility and the second review of its Resilience and Sustainability Facility, unlocking continued disbursements at a moment when the country’s external buffers remain thin but improving, according to the IMF’s official press release.
Fiscal Discipline Holding, Barely
Pakistan is on track to deliver a primary surplus of 1.6% of GDP in FY26, in line with program targets, while gross reserves climbed to $16 billion at end-December from $14.5 billion at end-June 2025. GDP growth in the first half of FY26 averaged 3.8% year-on-year, driven by the auto, construction, and garment industries, per the IMF’s Country Report No. 26/101.
Not every benchmark was met. A structural benchmark requiring amendments to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Act to align governance safeguards with international standards was missed, though the changes are pending Cabinet approval. A separate continuous benchmark barring preferential tax treatment was also missed after an extension of a sugar-import tax exemption, which authorities subsequently repealed.
The Middle East War’s Fiscal Bite
The IMF flags that Pakistan’s current account is projected to worsen by roughly 0.2 percentage points in FY26 and 0.4 points in FY27 as higher fuel-import costs are only partially offset by compressed non-oil imports. Under the Fund’s April 2026 adverse scenario, the cumulative hit to GDP could reach 1.5 percentage points by FY27, with inflation and current-account deterioration each roughly 1.5 to 2.5 percentage points worse than a pre-conflict baseline. Business Recorder separately reported the IMF lowering Pakistan’s growth forecast to 3.5% for the current fiscal year while raising the inflation projection to 8.4%, according to Business Recorder’s coverage.
Revenue Mobilization Under Pressure
Meeting the FY27 fiscal target requires an additional 0.6% of GDP in revenue-collection measures to address chronically low tax buoyancy. The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) is expected to generate 0.3% of GDP in additional revenue through its transformation plan and by streamlining tax expenditures, with an FBR revenue-collection floor proposed as a new quantitative performance criterion starting December 2026. At the provincial level, authorities are focused on broadening the General Sales Tax (GST) base for services.
Governance Costs Still Weighing on Growth
Pakistan’s economy loses an estimated 5–6.5% of GDP annually to corruption tied to entrenched “elite capture,” according to the IMF’s 2025 Governance and Corruption Diagnostic Assessment cited in Wikipedia’s economy of Pakistan overview. The IMF has urged continued momentum on anti-corruption institutions, state-owned enterprise reform and privatization, and energy-sector viability, alongside the broader structural reform push tied to the fund’s ongoing lending program.
For investors and businesses tracking Pakistan’s KSE-100 and rupee trajectory, the third review’s completion is a signal of continued program credibility, but the widening current-account gap tied to Middle East energy costs means the reform runway remains narrow.
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