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China: Germany's difficult balancing act

Profitable economic relations clash with competing systems. Germany is caught between the fronts. Berlin's most powerful ally and its most important trading partner are on a collision course — the US and China.

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The story of Germany and China is a story of balancing values and other interests. Those interests are primarily economic — China has been Germany's most important trading partner since 2015. After seven years of negotiatio­ns, the EU signed the Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment (CAI) with China in December 2020, under Germany's EU Council presidency.

The appeal of the Chinese market is likely to grow; in the next 10 years, it is estimated that the country will account for 30 percent of global economic growth.

Berlin and Beijing's relationsh­ip has evolved during the 16 years of Angela Merkel's chancellor­ship and has been elevated to the status of a "comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p." This is also because none of the major problems facing humanity, such as climate change and disarmamen­t, can be solved without Beijing.

For 10 years, the two countries have held regular intergover­nmental consultati­ons. The latest took place in April of this year, virtually instead of inperson, due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The atmosphere had noticeably cooled. There is the massive persecutio­n of the Uighur minority in Xinjiang, the oppression of the democracy movement in Hong Kong, Bei

jing's aggressive performanc­e in the South China Sea, threatenin­g gestures toward Taiwan. The conflict with China is growing. The most visible sign of this came in March, when the EU imposed sanctions on China, for the first time since the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989, for human rights violations against the Uighurs. In return, China imposed sanctions on members of the EU's parliament, officials, and academics. The European Parliament responded to this in May by freezing the ratificati­on of the CAI.

Successful autocracy

In its strategic outlook of March 2019, the European Commission describes China not only as a cooperatio­n partner and competitor: China was expressly referred to as a systemic rival, also as a key global player and leading technologi­cal power.

For a long time, it was presumed in the West that only democracie­s and market economies were able to create prosperity for a large part of the population. In China, you can see how, even in a communist autocracy, hundreds of millions of people have been brought up out of absolute poverty and into the middle class.

"That is why China looks very attractive as a model for many countries in the world," Heinrich Kreft told DW. The diplomat heads the Center for Diplomacy at Andrassy University Budapest.

"We take note," says Kreft, "that China is now an extremely present political actor on the world stage," also through its global "Belt and Road" (BRI) infrastruc­ture initiative. The diplomat concludes: "Basically, all our internatio­nal relations have a China aspect."

Own rules

As a global player, China is no longer simply adapting to the rules made by the West, Berlin-based China expert Eberhard Sandschnei­der observed: "The Chinese make their own rules."

By the 100-year anniversar­y of the founding of the People's Republic of China in 2049, China wants to be a mature, modern socialist power with the ability to set and shape rules economical­ly and technologi­cally at the top of the world. With that, China wants to get back to being in the center of the world order, explains Trier-based China researcher Sebastian Heilmann in an interview with DW. "And that is, of course, in conflict with the hitherto hegemonic power, the United States." Conflict between major powers

Wang Jisi, president of the Institute of Internatio­nal and Strategic Studies at Beijing University, described this conflict in the July/August edition of the influentia­l journal Foreign A airs: "The United States and China are embroiled in a contest that might prove more enduring, more wide-ranging, and more intense than any other internatio­nal competitio­n in modern history, including the Cold War."

Berlin's dilemma: This competitio­n is developing between its most powerful ally and its most important trading partner. Germany faces the threat of getting caught between the fronts, especially when it comes to technology.

"The US wants to do everything in its power to prevent China from overtaking it in key technologi­cal areas," US expert Josef Braml highlighte­d to DW. "Startled, the US now wants to hinder China's economic and military modernizat­ion. That is why they are counting on a strategy of economic decoupling — with no considerat­ion about the costs for Europe."

US or China?

With a policy that tries to serve both sides, US expert Braml expects that Berlin will not be able to keep itself removed from the issue forever: "In the struggle for techno-political spheres of influence, the US will increase the pressure on third countries and make them choose whether they do business with either America or China."

Economic interdepen­dence and the worldwide division of labor are regarded today as a risk in the geo-economic thinking of the world powers.

As an economic power that relies heavily on exports, Germany will have to find an answer to this new situation.

This article was translated from German.

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understand­ing this year’s elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developmen­ts as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.

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 ??  ?? Angela Merkel took part in regular government consultati­ons with China
Angela Merkel took part in regular government consultati­ons with China

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