China Is Not Winning Influence in PNG Through Roads—but Through Classrooms
by Bernard Yegiora Public debate in PNG tends to frame China’s influence almost entirely through infrastructure, loans, and geopolitics. Roads, ports, and Belt and Road headlines dominate commentary. While these issues matter, this framing obscures where China’s most durable and cost-effective influence is actually being built. It is not being built in concrete. It is being built in classrooms. Online Mandarin language class delivered by a language teacher from a partner Chinese university, with PNG students at the University of Goroka participating as part of higher education exchange and people-to-people cooperation. China’s long-term engagement in PNG is increasingly shaped through higher education exchange programs—scholarships, language training, and public-sector capacity building—that quietly influence skills formation, institutional familiarity, and professional networks over time. These programs receive far less public scrutiny than infrastructure projects, yet their e...