China, Germany should stick to ‘openness and free trade’ and keep policy ‘predictable’, Wang Yi says

China and Germany should “adhere to openness and free trade” and keep the policy environment “predictable”, top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi said, amid growing calls in Europe to de-risk from Beijing.
In talks with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Munich on Saturday, Foreign Minister Wang also offered support for Berlin to “play a bigger role in international and regional affairs” and called for the two nations to “work together to provide more stability and certainty for the world”.

Wang also noted that China and Germany this year mark the 10th anniversary of their “all-round strategic partnership”, and said they should learn from this experience to strengthen cooperation, according to a Chinese readout released on Sunday night.

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“The two sides should remove interference, continue to adhere to openness and free trade, give full play to the role of economic and trade cooperation as a ‘ballast stone’, and provide a predictable policy environment for this,” he said.

In response, Scholz – who is reportedly planning to visit China in April – said Berlin was against protectionism and decoupling and that it was willing to provide a “quality business environment to other countries’ enterprises in Germany”.

“The current international situation is facing a difficult time, and Germany is willing to work with China to play an active role in maintaining peace and stability,” Scholz said, according to the Chinese readout.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi meets his German counterpart Annalena Baerbock. Photo: dpa

Wang also held talks on Saturday with his German counterpart Annalena Baerbock, who called for more cooperation “in areas of common interest”.

“Germany is willing to work with China to … carry out consultations on regional affairs, and strengthen cooperation in addressing climate change and smooth international trade routes,” Baerbock said.

It comes at a time of strained relations between China and Germany – the world’s second and third largest economies, respectively.

The Scholz government in July unveiled its first ever China strategy, which labelled the country as a “systemic rival”, echoing the European Union’s language that China was “an economic competitor and a systemic rival”.

It also urged German companies and investors to de-risk their economic dependence on China, the country’s single largest trading partner.

The new policy also raised concerns over what Foreign Minister Baerbock called “unfair competition” from China, and called for a “level playing field” for German and Chinese businesses.

Beijing has rejected calls in the West to reduce dependency on China, with Premier Li Qiang in June saying it was a “forced proposition”.

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China-Europe rail freight reaches 50,000-train milestone amid rising EU-Beijing tensions

China-Europe rail freight reaches 50,000-train milestone amid rising EU-Beijing tensions

But despite concerns over geopolitical tensions and the Chinese economy – and pressure from Chinese rivals in industries once dominated by Germany like carmaking – German investment in China actually increased last year.

German direct investment in China rose by 4.3 per cent to a record €11.9 billion (US$12.8 billion) in 2023, according to a report by the German Economic Institute based on data from the Bundesbank. It concluded there was “no trend” of diversification away from China.

China was also Germany’s most important trading partner in 2023 for the eighth consecutive year, with goods worth €253.1 billion traded between the two countries, according to official German data.

South China Morning Post

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