The government is planning to borrow slightly more than US$900 million during the next fiscal year to fund infrastructure construction projects, including two dams and a new highway connecting the capital to Mandalay, according to a draft plan for national investment.
Most
of the $900.39 in planned loans will be borrowed from China, Japan and
India, with China pegged to lend the lion’s share, according to the
document obtained by Eleven Media Group. China is expected to lend more
than $527 million to the Union government for infrastructure
construction in the fiscal year beginning April 1.
These loans will
be for a $224 telecoms network, a new highway from Yangon to Mandalay
($150 million), and two dams: $70 to expand the recently constructed
Hsedawgyi dam and $12 million to upgrade the Beeluchaung hydropower
project, the document said. The Hsedawgyi project is north of Mandalay.
The dam was built by Htoo Trading Co Lt, which is on the US sanctions
list and owned by Tay Za, a business crony of senior generals.
India
is expected to lend more than $211 million. The Union government plans
to spend almost half of this, $100 million, on installing or upgrading
irrigation and drainage systems. Another $48 million of the loans from
Mumbai will be used to upgrade railway routes and purchase new trains,
while $6.2 million has been earmarked to install a telecoms network in
the southern and northern sections of Chin State.
The document also
shows that that the Union government is expecting about $161 million
from Tokyo to renovate power plants and power lines ($57.69 million),
expand the state-owned Kyangin cement plant (US$47 million) and
implement regional development projects.
source: Eleven Myanmar
www.elevenmyanmar.com/politics/2118-government-counts-on-big-loans-from-china-india-and-japan
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