Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Opinion: Germany must call off Angela Merkel's Chinese love affair

For years Berlin has mollycoddl­ed China in the hope that billions of euros in investment­s would prompt it to shun its authoritar­ian ways. Beijing's belligeren­ce shows the tactic has backfired, says DW's Ashutosh Pandey.

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel can't be faulted for not giving her all to bring about a change of heart by Beijing. Her dozen trips to China during her 16 years in office are a testimony to her conviction in the principle of "Wandel durch Handel," or change through trade.

German firms invested billions of euros in China, bringing with them critically needed manufactur­ing know-how to a rapidly advancing country. Heavily subsidized Chinese firms were allowed a free run in European markets for the longest time with many of them ending up acquiring strategica­lly important local firms. The hope was that deep economic ties would prompt Beijing to give up its authoritar­ian politics and adopt liberal, democratic values.

Merkel's pampering, however, has failed miserably with Beijing turning for the worse under President Xi Jinping. It has been carrying out human rights abuses against the Muslim Uyghur minority in Xinjiang with impunity, clamping down on pro

democracy activities in Hong Kong, building illegal islands, bullying government­s with trade wars, and trapping poor nations with debt.

Keeping Beijing in good humor

Merkel's big failure lies in the fact that she didn't know when to stop courting Beijing, when to draw a red line. She sought to boost trade ties even on her last official trip to China, carrying with her a large delegation of German business leaders even as pro-democracy protests roiled Hong Kong.

In 2019, the Federation of German Industries (BDI), whose interests Merkel had been promoting in Beijing, described China as a "systemic competitor," concluding that it "will not develop into a market economy or embrace liberalism in the foreseeabl­e future."

Still, Merkel carried on with

her pro-engagement policy even if it meant bulldozing through an investment pact between the European Union and China despite the latter not ratifying Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on convention­s on forced labor, something human rights groups had sought amid alleged use of slave labor in Xinjiang.

Stronger China policy

With Merkel on her way out, Berlin should seize the opportunit­y and adopt a forceful position on China. Germany with its own harrowing history of Nazi crimes must seek to build an alliance with like-minded countries, including the United States and Japan, to make Beijing pay for suppressin­g human rights.

Maintainin­g the status quo is not an option. The new government will face increased pressure to strongly condemn and act against Beijing.

Berlin's tough stance against practices contrary to the EU's core values is likely to rally members who have been left frustrated by Merkel's business-atany-cost approach and help the bloc finally adopt a common policy toward the Asian powerhouse.

Calling China's bluff

Much of Merkel's strategy was driven by a fear of a possible Chinese backlash against German firms active in one of the most lucrative markets. Perhaps she didn't realize that Germany has more leverage over China than it thinks it enjoys. That leverage increases manifold when Berlin works in tandem with its allies.

While China is Germany's biggest trading partner for goods with an annual trade volume of more than €200 billion ($237 billion), it's not the biggest destinatio­n for German goods. In other words, Germany buys more products from China than China buys from Germany. German companies employ more than a million people in China.

A 2015 study on GermanyChi­na trade relations by the Bertelsman­n Stiftung concluded that "Germany is not — as is generally assumed — significan­tly more dependent on China than China is on Germany." The Chinese consumer goods industry, whose low-cost products have made the country a global export

powerhouse, is largely powered by German machinery. Germany could easily replace most of the products it buys from China with imports from other countries.

It's also important to realize that the Chinese economy, which has benefited immensely from globalizat­ion, is today more integrated with other economies than ever. This means that any pain inflicted by Beijing on a trading partner is likely to be felt even at home.

China is not done with siphoning off intellectu­al property from Western firms and acquiring critical technology knowhow. In fact, it needs them even more as it realizes President Xi's goal of becoming a high-tech superpower. It can't afford to pick a fight with the EU whose technologi­es and capital have underpinne­d the Chinese growth story, especially as relations with the US and Australia sour.

Economic interests have taken precedence over values for far too long thanks to Merkel's obsession with keeping Beijing in good humor. It's time that changes.

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel didn't know when to stop courting Beijing
German Chancellor Angela Merkel didn't know when to stop courting Beijing
 ??  ?? DW business editor Ashutosh Pandey
DW business editor Ashutosh Pandey

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