4.3 Article

Coupling national geo-political economic strategies and the Belt and Road Initiative: The China-Belarus Great Stone Industrial Park

Journal

POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
Volume 84, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2020.102296

Keywords

China; Belarus; Special economic zone; Zoning technologies; Belt and Road Initiative; Emergent geo-political economic culture; Strategic coupling; Great Stone Industrial Park

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [41530751]
  2. National Social Science Foundation of China [17VDL008]
  3. Project of Bureau of International Cooperation of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [131A11KYSB20170014]
  4. Strategic Priority Research Program (A) of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA19040403]
  5. Chinese Academy of Sciences [2017VP01]

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The joint development of the Great Stone Industrial Park by Belarus and China aims to establish a high-tech industrial zone and an eco-friendly satellite city, while reducing Belarus' dependence on Russian energy resources and attracting foreign investment in line with China's Belt and Road Initiative. National leaders and stakeholders play key roles in the top-down design and governance of the park, leveraging a cooperation platform to align Chinese and Belarusian interests for mutual benefit.
The joint development by Belarus and China of the Great Stone Industrial Park (GSIP) is designed to establish a high-tech industrial zone and an eco-friendly satellite city of Minsk as a key node on the Eurasian Land Bridge linking China with the Eurasian Economic Union and the European Union. The development and organization of the GSIP are explained in the light of a coupling of the strategic goals of the two countries in the context of a new Chinese model of external engagement called an emergent geo-political economic culture. These goals include Belarus' desire to reduce its dependence on Russian gas and oil, upgrade and diversify its economy, strengthen its integration with Eurasia and find new partners, by attracting Chinese and other foreign direct investment in the context of China's Going Out and Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). An analysis of the roles of national leaders Aliaksandr Lukashenka and Xi Jinping and of different stakeholders in the predominantly top-down design, development and governance of the park reveals the way in which a BRI cooperation platform permits the coupling of Chinese and Belarusian interests and strategies in ways through which each side expects to benefit.

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