Towards complete development finance data: Quantifying China's international education co‐operation and presence in the Global South

Author:

Doi Kenichi1,Ikeda Ami2ORCID,Murakami Yuki3,Kuroda Kazuo4

Affiliation:

1. Center for the Study of International Cooperation in Education Waseda University Japan

2. Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences Hiroshima University Japan

3. Global Education Monitoring Report UNESCO

4. Graduate School of Asia‐Pacific Studies Waseda University Japan

Abstract

AbstractMotivationChina does not participate in the development co‐operation reporting mechanism of the Organisation for Economic Co‐operation and Development's (OECD) development co‐operation reporting mechanism, nor does it voluntarily publish overseas development finance data. Despite recent quantitative research on China's foreign aid to other sectors, such as health, no precedent exists for quantifying China's international education co‐operation (IEC).PurposeThis article will use AidData's Chinese Official Finance Dataset (AidData 2.0) to estimate the IEC using the OECD's internationally standardized definitions of development finance and frameworks for classifying IEC projects.Approach and methodsWe thoroughly examined all types of IEC projects, including official finance projects other than those that meet the definition of official development assistance (ODA). In our comparative analysis of educational aid between China and traditional donors, we focused on ODA‐like projects and examined the number of projects and funding amounts to determine China's IEC priorities.FindingsThe result shows that, between 2000 and 2017, China's IEC commitments totalled 1,524 education‐related international projects, representing 12% of the total international finance project portfolio, most of which are in Africa. Compared to the OECD framework, China prioritized higher education (n = 784, 51%) and education facilities and training (n = 244, 16%). An estimate of cumulative funding between 2000 to 2017 showed that China was the 10th largest donor of education aid to African countries, behind France, the World Bank, Germany, the United States, the EU, the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, and the Netherlands.Policy implicationsThe findings of this study help our understanding of China's IEC finance. With China's involvement in education development aid growing in recent years and donors looking for solutions to developing countries' debt crises, this will allow for more effective collaboration, co‐ordination, and resource mobilization for both donor and recipient countries.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference57 articles.

1. Boston University Global Development Policy Center. (n.d.).China's Overseas Development Finance Database.http://www.bu.edu/gdp/chinas‐overseas‐development‐finance/

2. Aid ‘With Chinese Characteristics’: Chinese Foreign Aid and Development Finance Meet the OECD-DAC Aid Regime

3. Silk road diplomacy: Deconstructing Beijing's toolkit to influence South and Central Asia;Custer S.;AidData at William & Mary.,2019

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