She voiced hope that the new body would provide "up to £8 billion ($10 billion)" in investments per year in Commonwealth countries by 2025, up from the current £1.5 billion ($2 billion), by encouraging the private sector and western allies to put money into member states.
Didi Kirsten Tatlow, a senior non-resident fellow with the Sinopsis Project in Prague, which describes iself as a world-leading resource on China's foreign policy, told The Telegraph that "we [the UK] have been completely asleep at the wheel for decades".
"They would like to undermine whatever they can internationally, so they can pick off countries and prevent anti-Chinese resolutions in the Commonwealth and elsewhere. […] China is commercially preying on the Commonwealth. The question is, can we respond with a better offering? Can the UK steer western investment funds into these places?", Mendoza wondered.