top of page

Germany To Be Tough On Trade With China

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Sep 15, 2022
  • 2 min read

Germany's economy minister said on Tuesday that the government was working on a new trade policy with China to reduce dependence on Chinese raw materials, batteries, and semiconductors, promising "no more naivety" in trade dealings with Beijing, Christian Kraemer reported for Reuters.


Photo Insert: Robert Habeck is Vice Chancellor of Germany, Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Action.



Sources told Reuters last week the economy ministry was considering a raft of new measures to make business with China less attractive. This is the first time the minister has made clear the tougher line was being translated into policy measures.


Robert Habeck told Reuters that China was a welcome trading partner, but Germany could not allow Beijing's protectionism to distort competition and would not hold back criticism of human rights violations under threat of losing business. "We cannot allow ourselves to be blackmailed," he said in an interview.



Habeck did not outline new measures in full but said they would include a closer examination of Chinese investments in Europe, such as infrastructure. China has been Germany's biggest trade partner for the past six years, with volumes reaching over 245 billion euros ($246 billion) in 2021.


But the center-left government is taking a tougher line towards Beijing than its center-right predecessor, worried about Germany's dependence on Asia's economic superpower.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

Habeck said he was opposed to plans by China's Cosco to buy a stake in a container operator at Germany's Hafen Hamburg port, signaling concerns about Chinese takeover deals are spreading out from the technology arena into other industry sectors, such as logistics.


"I'm leaning towards the fact that we don't allow that," he said.


Government & politics: Politicians, government officials and delegates standing in front of their country flags in a political event in the financial district.

On Thursday, Reuters reported the economy ministry was considering measures including reducing or even scrapping investment and export guarantees for China and no longer promoting trade fairs. Habeck said Germany must open up to new trading partners and regions as many sectors were heavily dependent on selling to China.


"If it (the Chinese market) were to close, which is not likely at the moment ... we would have extreme sales problems," Habeck said, adding the economy ministry was contributing to the new German-China policy, much of which is already in place.


Market & economy: Market economist in suit and tie reading reports and analysing charts in the office located in the financial district.

"And from this you will see that there is no more naivety," he added. Berlin also wants to examine Chinese investments in Europe more critically, he said, adding Europe should not support China's Silk Road Initiative, which aims to buy up strategic infrastructure in Europe and influence trade policy.





Optimize asset flow management and real-time inventory visibility with RFID tracking devices and custom cloud solutions.
Sweetmat disinfection mat

Recent Posts

See All
TFD (Facebook Profile) (1).png
TFD (Facebook Profile) (3).png

Register for News Alerts

  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • X
  • YouTube

Thank you for Subscribing

The Financial District®  2023

bottom of page