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NZ to be founding member of the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, contributing about $125 mln

NZ to be founding member of the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, contributing about $125 mln

New Zealand will become a founding member of China's Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, contributing paid in capital of about NZ$125 million over five years, Finance Minister Bill English says.

The Chinese led bank is being set up to invest in infrastructure across Asia.

“Increased infrastructure investment will enhance the Asian region’s growth and that will be good for New Zealand,” English says. “New Zealand was the first western developed nation to join negotiations to set up the Bank and our membership will enhance our already strong economic, trade and investment links with the Asian region.”

English says it's envisaged the Bank will have initial capital of close to US$100 billion, about NZ$139 billion, to invest in infrastructure projects. It's being funded by individual country contributions proportionate to their economic size.

"New Zealand’s paid in capital will be around NZ$125 million, paid over five years."

Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully says with New Zealand benefiting from the rapid and sustained development across Asia, and to ensure this continues and more people in Asia are lifted out of poverty, the region needs to address continuing constraints posed by infrastructure bottlenecks.

"Cabinet agreed in December that New Zealand would join negotiations to establish the founding articles of agreement for the new Bank and to agree on acceptable governance arrangements. Those progressed to a point where those conditions have now been met,” Mr McCully says.

“The next step will be a formal signing ceremony in Beijing later this month. The Bank is expected to begin operations before the end of the year," English and McCully say.

The United States has reportedly lobbied allies not to join the "World Bank for Asia" amid talk China will use it to erode US and Japanese influence - and increase its own - in the Asian region. Australia confirmed in March it will be joining.

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4 Comments

The dollar has been underpinning US hard power and hegemony since the Second World War, exploiting its role as the world’s international reserve currency. But US currency hegemony is also in the process of being contested with the creation in October 2014 of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) by China as a counterweight to the IMF. Read more

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This government seems obsessed with sucking up to the Chinese. The Auckland house price crisis began when an easy way to get residency was introduced - ie simply purchase an investment property for at least $1m. The Chinese began to pour in to NZ and now it is out of control with many Chinese now owning multiple properties which are often left vacant. It is not so much the foreign offshore based buyers but the ones that are already here. 23 of the 25 top Barfoots salespeople are Asian and no wonder. Pull the plug on Chinese migration and you will solve the Auckland housing crisis overnight! Do nothing and 15% per year increases are a certainty into the foreseeable future.

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The AIIB will no doubt end up with messrs English and Key as directors one their jobs as pollies are over.

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agree it looks like setting themselves up for future troughing

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