EuroNews (English)

German chancellor rules out decoupling from China but calls for quality cooperatio­n

-

Germany’s chancellor Olaf Scholz has said he has no plans to decouple from China but demanded more progress towards better access for German companies in the world’s second-largest economy.

Scholz is on a three-day visit to China to press his case for a more level economic playing eld.

The trip comes just days after he and France’s president Emmanuel Macron called for a “rebalancin­g” of trade relations with Europe.

China’s president Xi Jinping said Germany should view and develop bilateral ties from a longterm and strategic perspectiv­e.

“The significan­ce of consolidat­ing and developing China-Germany relations goes far beyond the bilateral scope and carries great in uence on the Eurasian continent and the rest of the world,” he said.

'Reckless' actions

Scholz’s visit arguably comes at a difficult time. Just last week China slammed the EU as “reckless” after it launched an investigat­ion into state subsidies for Chinese wind turbine manufactur­ers.

The investigat­ion looks into whether Chinese subsidies are giving wind turbine companies an unfair advantage for projects in ve member countries: Spain, Greece, France, Romania and Bulgaria.

This action sends a detrimenta­l signal to the world, suggesting discrimina­tion against Chinese enterprise­s and endorsing protection­ism. China Chamber of Commerce to the EU

That probe was launched after similar investigat­ions into Chinese solar panel makers and electric trains.

“We’re making full use of the tools that we have,” the EU commission­er for competitio­n, Margrethe Vestager, said.

“This action sends a detrimenta­l signal to the world, suggesting discrimina­tion against Chinese enterprise­s and endorsing protection­ism,” the China Chamber of Commerce to the EU said.

Record economic growth

This is all happening as China posts record economic growth.

At a press conference earlier on Tuesday, the National Bureau of Statistics said GDP for the rst quarter of 2024 had grown 5.3%, reaching over 29 trillion yuan (€37 trillion).

That gure exceeds the 5% growth target set by China’s premier Li Qiang in March, which some analysts saw as “ambitious”.

Those numbers are in stark contrast to the stumbling start to the year for the EU.

The Commission’s Winter Interim Forecast, published in February, revised economic growth for 2024 down to 0.9% in the EU and 0.8% in the eurozone.

Germany's economy, meanwhile, is one of the worst-performing in Europe, according to the April 2024 Weil European Distress Index.

 ?? ?? FILE - German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, left, meets Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of People in Beijing, China, Friday, Nov. 4, 2022.
FILE - German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, left, meets Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of People in Beijing, China, Friday, Nov. 4, 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from France