حديث الثلاثاء : مستقبل الشراكة الصينية الإفريقية: ماذا بعد قمة فوكاك 2024؟

March 4, 2025

شكلت قمة فوكاك 2024 لحظة حاسمة في مسار العلاقات الصينية الإفريقية، حيث تمخضت عن توقيع اتفاقيات كبرى تشمل قطاعات حيوية مثل البنية التحتية، الطاقة، التجارة، والصناعة. كما أعلنت الصين عن استثمارات بقيمة 50 مليار دولار لدعم التنمية في إفريقيا خلال السنوات الثلاث المقبلة، إلى جانب إطلاق عشر مبادرات جديدة لتعزيز الاستدامة والنمو في القارة.

لكن هذه التوجهات تأتي وسط تحولات جيوسياسية كبرى، مع احتدام المنافسة بين الصين والولايات المتحدة على النفوذ في إفريقيا. في هذا السياق، أثار قرار إدارة ترامب بسحب الوكالة الأمريكية للتنمية الدولية من عدة مشاريع إفريقية تساؤلات حول قدرة الصين على سد هذا الفراغ، ومدى استعداد الدول الإفريقية للاعتماد المتزايد على بكين.

في هذه الحلقة، نناقش أبرز مخرجات قمة فوكاك وتأثيرها على الاقتصادات الإفريقية، توزيع الاستثمارات الصينية، وأهم القطاعات التي ستحظى بأكبر دعم، تداعيات التنافس الصيني الأمريكي على خيارات إفريقيا المستقبلية وكيف يمكن لسياسات إدارة دونالد ترامب أن تؤثر على التعاون الصيني الإفريقي، مع ضيفنا الأستاذ فتح الله والعلو، باحث بارز بمركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد.

Speakers
Fathallah Oualalou
Senior Fellow
Fathallah Oualalou is an economist, Senior Fellow at the Policy Center for the New South.  He obtained his PhD in economics from the University of Paris in 1968. Prior to joining the Policy Center for the New South, he served as a professor at Mohammed V University in Rabat and other higher education institutions in Morocco, and as an associate professor at several foreign universities. He is the author of numerous books and articles in the fields of economic theory, financial economics, international economic relations, the economies of Maghreb countries, the Arab world, and the Euro-Mediterranean area. In addition, he was the president of the Association of Moroccan Economists at the Union of Arab Economists. His political activism began with the creation, in the 1960 ...
Redouan Najah
International Relations Specialist
Redouan Najah is an International Relations Specialist in the Strategic Monitoring and Analysis Unit of the Policy Center for the New South. His areas of research and publications focus on cyberspace, cyber defense, cybersecurity, Central African countries, and China in Africa. Redouan joined the Policy Center for the New South research team in 2019. He holds a master's degree in Geopolitics and International Relations from Cadi Ayaad University, Marrakech, and a bachelor's degree in Economics and Management, from the Polydisciplinary Faculty, Béni-Mellal. ...

RELATED CONTENT

  • August 1, 2018
    “This article has been originally published in 'Morocco in Focus 2018,' the magazine of the Moroccan Embassy in New Delhi, India on the occasion of the Morocco National Day 2018.” Introduction In an article published last year, the author stressed the role of partnership between Morocco and India for the inclusive growth of small farmers. There is no doubt that agriculture remains a major instrument for human development both in India and in Africa. Several international reports&n ...
  • February 21, 2018
    تعتبر 2018 بلا شك نقطة تحول في تطور الاقتصاد العالمي. أوروبا، بعد أن بدأت في الخروج من الأزمة في عام 2017 ، من المرجح أن تدخل مرحلة نمو قوي ومستدام بفضل الزيادة الهيكلية في الإنت°اج الصناعي، إضافة الى الانعكاسات الإيجابي°ة للمشروع الإصلاحي المؤيد لأوروبا موحدة الذي يحمله الثن°ائي الفرنسي الألماني. كما ان آسيا تستمر في تأكيد مكانتها كمحرك رئيسي للاقتصاد العالمي، حيث اصبحت ثلاثة بلدان من اسيا )الصين واليابان والهند( تنتمي لقائمة أكبر خمسة اقتصادات عالمية في عام 2018 . هذه التطورات تدف ...
  • Authors
    April 3, 2017
    Turkey has been approaching a crossroads for some time now. Soon enough it will have to choose a direction. On April 16, 2017 Turks will vote in a referendum on President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s proposed constitutional amendment that would shift the country’s power center from a parliamentary system to a presidential one.  If successful, not only would this further consolidate power in the executive’s hands—in this case Erdogan himself—but it would also pave the way for him to ...
  • Authors
    Françoise Nicolas
    March 24, 2017
    Since the fall of the Derg regime in 1991, cordial relations have developed between China and Ethiopia, forming a positive political backdrop in front of which the two countries’ interests have increasingly converged. On the one hand, Ethiopia seeks to replicate the experience of East Asian countries such as Taiwan, Malaysia, or China and to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) in order to accelerate the development of its manufacturing capacities (in particular through an ambit ...
  • Authors
    Silvia Colombo
    Mohamed El Harrak
    Nicolò Sartori
    May 27, 2016
    Energy is at the core of the remarkable current transitions in the global economy and geopolitics, and natural gas plays a crucial role in these processes. In this context of rapidly evolving trends at the market level and developing dynamics between regional and global actors, The Future of Natural Gas aims at analysing the role of natural gas in the future energy mix by considering several key factors: the ambitious climate policies agreed by the international community, cost issu ...
  • March 17, 2016
    Jointly organized by OCP Policy Center and Shanghai Institutes for International Studies, the roundtable on "Current African Economic and Strategic Challenges and Opportunities; Intersecting Views from China and Morocco" was a great opportunity to gather experts from both side, to brainstorm opportunities to enhance the role of think-tanks and civil society organization in the consolidation of the Afro-Asian cooperation more efficiently and in a more comprehensive way. Th ...
  • Authors
    January 30, 2015
    “In my view, China’s very high rates of saving and of investment in infrastructure, plant and equipment, Rand D, and human capital should be seen more as a source of strength, than of weakness. There has, of course, been overinvestment in some sectors, such as heavy industry and housing in some regions, but China’s GDP and infrastructure stock per capita is still just a fraction of that of the most advanced countries, and the country’s potential to catch-up remains largely unexploit ...