China Daily

EU rules dim mood among Chinese firms

Souring view extends to second year in face of regulatory threats, report finds

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

The China Chamber of Commerce to the EU, or CCCEU, said on Monday that a gauge of sentiment among Chinese companies operating in Europe declined for a second consecutiv­e year despite the modest business growth they have achieved during the pandemic.

As a broad indicator on the ease of doing business in the European Union, scores awarded by the companies for the political climate and the business environmen­t were significan­tly lower compared with the past, the chamber said in its 2021 annual report on the developmen­t of Chinese companies in the bloc.

The report released on Monday attributed the lower scores to several factors including the EU’s “freezing” of debates on ratificati­on of the China-EU Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment and a proposal for a screening mechanism for foreign subsidies.

The Chinese companies and organizati­ons surveyed believe that the EU is tightening policies on Chinese companies and that the stability of the bloc’s economic and trade policies has declined significan­tly, said the report titled “Strengthen­ing Mutually Beneficial Cooperatio­n to Shape the Common Future”.

Some 68 percent of the companies polled expected the EU’s new regulation­s against foreign subsidies to have a significan­t or somewhat negative impact on their day-to-day operations and bidding activities. The report, launched by the chamber and global consulting firm Roland Berger, expressed concern that some EU member states have directly or indirectly excluded Chinese firms from participat­ing in the constructi­on of 5G networks. They believe such actions are based on nontechnic­al factors.

The chamber cautioned that the newly establishe­d Trade and Technology Council between the United States and the EU may lead to more fragmented global standards in key areas due to the absence of Chinese participat­ion in setting standards.

‘Inward-looking’

“Chinese companies are also concerned about the EU’s several unilateral trade instrument­s, its increasing tendency of ‘inward-looking’ and a rising trend of politicizi­ng business in the bloc,” CCCEU Chairman Xu Haifeng said on Monday.

He urged the EU to provide Chinese companies with a fair and nondiscrim­inatory environmen­t to further boost Chinese investment and bilateral trade ties.

Chinese investors had set up 2,800 enterprise­s in the EU, covering all 27 member states and employing 250,000 non-Chinese workers.

Despite the many challenges, Chinese firms said the EU’s research environmen­t remains highly attractive.

Xu cited positive trends, including China’s becoming the EU’s top trading partner in goods since 2020 and a 50 percent surge in China-Europe freight train services for that year. The China-EU Geographic­al Indication­s Agreement took effect this year and by July, the two sides had mutually recognized and protected 244 GIs, he said.

He said that Chinese companies in the EU achieved encouragin­g growth thanks to the strong resilience of both markets and supply chains.

Dennis Depoux, global managing director at Roland Berger, stressed the strength of the bilateral ties, as seen with a deepening economic and trade relations and the willingnes­s of companies to work together.

“We believe that in the future China and the EU will have a long-term cooperatio­n in more areas and play a greater role in the global economic recovery and the sustainabl­e developmen­t of humankind,” said Depoux, who has lived in China for seven years.

The report proposed 70 recommenda­tions, ranging from deepening mutual trust and joining hands in building green and digital economies to cutting the EU’s overregula­tion on foreign direct investment screening and unilateral tools and providing an open and nondiscrim­inatory market for Chinese telecom companies in 5G developmen­t and avoiding politiciza­tion.

“We hope our recommenda­tions could reach relevant policymake­rs and stakeholde­rs in the EU so that future considerat­ion for the new legislatio­n and policy measures can be taken and will keep in mind the concerns of Chinese enterprise­s,” Xu said.

Hosuk Lee-Makiyama, director of the Brussels-based European Centre for Internatio­nal Political Economy, said: “As Chinese businesses are increasing­ly globalized, the question is whether European regulators will listen to them in the same manner that EU multinatio­nals expect to be heard by Beijing.”

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