Facing unexpected turbulence over its investments in Myanmar, China is employing a strategy more commonly used by Western corporations: The “corporate social responsibility” campaign.
Hence last week’s rollout of new guidelines to be followed by Chinese
firms doing business here in Myanmar (Burma), a country that until
recently had been viewed by many as a Chinese client state.
The
move speaks to China’s image problem not only in Myanmar, but in many of
the Asian and African countries where it operates copper mines, dams,
and oil fields amid complaints of safety violations and environmental
damage.
Gao Mingbo, the social media-savvy head of the political section at the Chinese Embassy here in Yangon,
sees the Myanmar effort – which is now a staple of US corporate
strategy in the developing world – as a “pilot” exercise for how Chinese
companies should be doing business abroad.
But China’s troubles in Myanmar are also a cautionary note for other
countries looking for business in Myanmar, where people are now far less
afraid to protest investments that may impinge on their rights.
Protests over land rights and environmental damage associated with
foreign investments are now common.
Myanmar’s foreign investment
commission is “attaching much more importance to the environmental and
social issues than before,” says Edwin Vanderbruggen, a Yangon-based
attorney at VDB-Loi. “In that context investors from any country,
including China, do well to position themselves stronger as responsible
corporate citizens.”
The move comes just as China prepares to
switch on newly-built pipelines that will carry oil and natural gas
across Myanmar, from the Bay of Bengal to China’s Yunnan Province.
The
pipelines drew protests from increasingly vocal Myanmar civil society
groups over related land-grabs. It was similar to the controversy
China’s resource projects have caused elsewhere, but a surprise to Beijing, which some say had grown complacent in its relations with its neighbor to the southwest.
“It’s
all about perceptions,” says Mr. Gao. He says that Chinese companies
are already doing much to help local communities affected by their
investments, but that companies have done a poor job promoting their
good works.
It’s been a hard lesson, he says. “It’s not
responsible to accuse the Chinese of doing nothing to help the local
communities – that’s not fair,” says.
Myanmar’s rapid transition
from military rule to democracy has exposed just how complicated
Sino-Myanmar ties really are. Myanmar has been balancing its historic
reliance on China by opening up to the world, and expanding ties with
the United States and Europe.
And the past two years have seen a
spate of high-profile bumps in the economic relationship, including
President Thein Sein’s decision to cancel a controversial, long-planned
Chinese dam-building project in 2011 and a joint Chinese-Myanmar
copper-mining project in the northwestern part of the country.
Now,
the Chinese government is realizing that it needs to shore up its
image. Beijing’s sudden interest in promoting corporate social
responsibility and showcasing its assistance efforts are part of that
tactical effort.
At a press event last week, the Chinese embassy
and the Chinese-Myanmar Enterprises Association promised “moral self
discipline to attain the trust of Myanmar society and people,” a focus
on job creation, and greater engagement with local communities.
What
it will amount to remains unclear. Regardless, China’s effort shows the
importance that Beijing places on its Myanmar relations and
investments, amid increasing competition from the West. The oil
pipeline, for instance, will allow China to bypass the Straits of
Malacca – a potential chokepoint in a military conflict – when importing
fuel from Africa and the Middle East.
source: The Christian Science Monitor
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2013/0712/Chinese-firms-in-Myanmar-attempt-to-fix-image-problem
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