China Daily Global Edition (USA)

German chancellor’s visit to bolster firms’ confidence

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s eye-catching China visit, which brought him to Beijing on Monday evening following trips to Chongqing and Shanghai, will boost the confidence of German businesses in expanding their presence in the Chinese market, analysts said.

Scholz was expected to meet with President Xi Jinping and have talks with Premier Li Qiang in Beijing on Tuesday before concluding his three-day official visit to China, which started on Sunday.

While in Shanghai on Monday, Scholz visited the Asia-Pacific Innovation Center of Covestro, a German manufactur­er of high-quality polymer materials, and met with students at Tongji University.

“We are deeply honored to welcome Chancellor Scholz and get the opportunit­y to highlight the potential of the chemical industry as well as Covestro to help drive sustainabl­e change in China and the rest of the world,” Covestro CEO Markus Steilemann said in a news release.

“Our decadeslon­g presence in China epitomizes the spirit of Sino-German cooperatio­n, which has been strongly beneficial for both sides. We count on the support of both government­s in further catering for openness and mutual trust,” Steilemann added.

China stands as one of Covestro’s primary markets, with its 2023 sales in China accounting for over 20 percent of the group’s total and its cumulative investment in the country exceeding 4 billion euros ($4.26 billion), according to the news release on the company’s website.

Scholz’s China visit, the second one since he became chancellor in late 2021, came after Germany’s federal government pushed for a “de-risking” policy in July to reduce economic reliance on China.

However, observers said that the visiting delegation, which included the federal ministers of environmen­t, agricultur­e and transporta­tion, as well as many German business leaders, including executives from BMW, Bayer, Siemens and ThyssenKru­pp, shows that pragmatic cooperatio­n remains the cornerston­e of the bilateral ties.

Gunter Schoech, director of German market research and consulting company Debrouilla­ge, said that in reality, businesses simply have a better sense than ideologica­l hard-liners of pragmatic cooperatio­n for the common good.

“The visit by Scholz’s delegation will likely give them a boost,” Schoech said in an opinion piece published on the website of China Global Television Network.

The aim for global transforma­tion toward a sustainabl­e, green economy is the common ground between China and Germany that the dialogue on various contested topics will be built upon, Schoech added.

In 2023, China remained Germany’s top trading partner for the eighth straight year, with bilateral trade reaching 253.1 billion euros.

Miguel Angel Lopez Borrego, chairman of ThyssenKru­pp AG, was quoted by Shanghai-based news outlet ThePaper.cn as saying that Scholz’s visit to China fully demonstrat­es the importance of the Sino-German relationsh­ip.

For many years, China and Germany have been important trading partners, maintainin­g a strong and close cooperativ­e relationsh­ip, Borrego said. Thanks to this close relationsh­ip, many German companies, including ThyssenKru­pp, have continued to invest in China and have achieved significan­t developmen­t, he added.

The German Chamber of Commerce in China, in its report “Competitiv­eness of German Companies in China”, which was released ahead of Scholz’s visit to China, said that German companies operating in China face a range of challenges but are optimistic about growth.

It found that 79 percent of the companies surveyed were planning to continue to invest in China and remain competitiv­e.

Maximilian Butek, executive director of the German Chamber of Commerce in China, said the report shows that the companies are confident in the Chinese market, as the majority are expecting an improvemen­t in the country’s economy.

Over half of the companies plan to keep investing in China, Butek said, adding that this is a strong commitment that shows they are confident about the long-term outlook for China’s economy.

 ?? MICHAEL KAPPELER / AP ?? German Chancellor Olaf Scholz attends an exchange event with students at Tongji University in Shanghai on Monday.
MICHAEL KAPPELER / AP German Chancellor Olaf Scholz attends an exchange event with students at Tongji University in Shanghai on Monday.

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