Adb's Fujioka Says Stalemate With Taiwan Continues
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) will not change its decision to admit China as a member despite protests from founder member Taiwan, bank president Masao Fujioka said.
China’s admission in March 1986 and the decision of the bank to change Taiwan’s name to ‘Taipei, China’ caused a Taiwanese boycott of the ADB’s last annual meeting in Manila.
Fujioka told Reuters in an interview that Taiwan had been invited to the bank’s 20th annual meeting starting April 27 in Osaka, “but the situation remains the same.”
“The bank’s board agreed to change Taiwan’s name to ‘Taipei, China’,” Fujioka said.
“We have tried to maintain our channels of communication through the Taiwanese director, but we are not negotiating with a view to changing our agreement with China,” he said.
ADB figures show China has the largest shareholding among the bank’s developing members, with 7.2 pct of its equity.
Fujioka said a stalemate also continued with Vietnam, which complained at last year’s meeting that for several years the ADB had unilaterally stopped advancing loans.
An ADB spokesman said the last loan of 40.67 mln dlrs was made to the then Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) in 1974.
Vietnam said last year that only 23 mln dlrs of that loan were disbursed.
The bank’s 1986 annual report said of 11 loans approved for Vietnam, eight had been closed, two were suspended and only one was under administration at the end of 1986.
Cumulative disbursements to Vietnam at the end of 1986 totalled 25.3 mln dlrs, or 99.5 pct of the total amount of effective loans, the report said.
“The situation (in Vietnam) is not conducive to bank operations,” Fujioka said. “Vietnam continues to be a member. We would like to help it, but new loans seem to be difficult.”
“It’s not a question of political instability, the environment has to be right for banking operations.”
He said with the first loans made to India in 1986, and lending operations in China scheduled to start this year, the ADB had now acquired a “truly Asian” character.
Although China’s finance ministry had gained five years of experience in borrowing from the World Bank, ADB loans would be routed through the country’s central bank, Fujioka said.
“It’s been a very slow start,” Fujioka said. “We identified three projects (in China). One disappeared and we now have only two left.”
He said the ADB might lend China between 200 and 300 mln dlrs in 1987 for an investment bank and an energy project.
He did not foresee an expansion of lending to India.
The ADB in 1986 approved two loans to India totalling 250 mln dlrs.
“There is a sort of agreement that our loans to India should be modest and that the World Bank should be the major lender,” Fujioka said. He did not give details.