China Daily

Belt and Road holds key in Sino-German relations

Timeline

- By ULRICH BLUM for China Daily ILLUSTRATI­ON BY XIA DIWEN / CHINA DAILY

The Belt and Road Initiative promoted by President Xi Jinping foresees the reactivati­on of a corridor with maritime and terrestria­l commercial links between China and Europe, Germany being one of the important poles of this concept.

It has triggered, especially if the concept of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank is taken into account, a global reflection on the role of economic links on the Asian-European land mass. It has also reaffirmed to the peoples of this area that economic collaborat­ion from East to West has a long tradition, and over and above that has always been embedded in cultural cooperatio­n.

Few people know that the term Silk Road was coined by Ferdinand von Richthofen in 1877. He was a geographer from the commercial­ly important city of Leipzig, crossed by one of the Salt Roads that have their European center in Halle, a city just 50 kilometers away. Indeed the name Halle relates to a Celtic and Greek languagero­otforthete­rmsalt.

From Germany the Silk Road found its way into the English-speaking world and was finally brought to China, where everybody today thinks it is the natural term for the grand periods of China as one of the cultural and economic centers with global links.

Salt Roads and Silk Roads may be on identical routes as in many parts of Germany or in the Mongolian area of Baotou. This has led us to the establishm­ent of an annual conference named Silk Road Meets Salt Road. Scholars from all over the world, especially from China and Germany, meet in the historic Halle Salt Production Museum and reflect on cultural, economic, political and technologi­cal issues.

There are many very specific Sino-German aspects that lead us to state that there may be something like a Silk-Road paradigm. We may start with Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (1646-1716), inventor of the digital system, a producer of a mechanical computer, but also, after the catastroph­e of the Thirty Years War (16181648)inEurope,someonewho introduced Chinese philosophy and asked whether Europe needed more thinking in terms of harmony.

This led to the emergence of the physiocrat­ic liberal October 1972 China establishe­s relations with the then Federal Republic of Germany. October 1975 German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt pays an official visit to China, the first by a German head of government. May 2006 German Chancellor Angela Merkel pays her first visit to China. school of economic thinking in the 16th century. Another important event in the relationsh­ip between German and China was the transferri­ng of standardiz­ation and patenting systems to China in the early 1960s – leading to an interactio­n in industry and engineerin­g that by far exceeds the level to be expected with regard to geographic distance.

Applying this joint heritage to modern times, thus entering the fields of economics and technology, both countries seem to be ideal partners, extremely complement­ary in most fields, competitiv­e in some others, but always both looking to a promising future.

Germany has a powerful techno-industrial base and a sound entreprene­urial foundation, both proving their resilience during the recent economic crisis, especially in contrast to other industrial­ized countries in Europe, which experience­d a meltdown of their manufactur­ing base.

Some of the best performing investment­s in China come from industrial Mittelstan­d, namely the family-based global medium-sized enterprise­s, and, many Chinese firms have bought themselves into formerly German family firms where successors were unavailabl­e.

China, because of Confuciani­sm, has a family-oriented philosophy supporting family business. Professor Dr. Dr. h.c. Ulrich Blum holds a chair in Political Economy at Martin-LutherUniv­ersity Halle-Wittenberg in Germany and is director of the Center of Economics of Materials – CEM, and is visiting professor at University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics (UIBE) in Beijing.

 ?? SHEN HONG / XINHUA ?? A junction box is assembled at a Sino-German plant in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, in April. More than 50 percent of the plant’s products are sold overseas.
SHEN HONG / XINHUA A junction box is assembled at a Sino-German plant in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, in April. More than 50 percent of the plant’s products are sold overseas.
 ??  ?? March 2014 President Xi Jinping pays his first state visit to Germany as relations boosted to comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p.
March 2014 President Xi Jinping pays his first state visit to Germany as relations boosted to comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p.

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