China aims to boost ties with Germany amid Trump trade war

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Dec. 1, 2018 / 3:16 PM GMT

By Andy Eckardt

HAMBURG, Germany — A new chapter of the love affair between China and Germany is unfolding as the protectionist Trump administration targets both countries with tariffs.

The president this week once again raised the prospect of introducing a new 25 percent tariff on imported cars, rattling nerves in Germany — which exports $20 billion worth of vehicles to the U.S. annually.

Calls for further expansion of political and economic cooperation between Beijing and Berlin resonated loudly at this week’s China Meets Europe summit in this northern German port city.

While China’s drive to strengthen old trade relations and seek new alliances in Europe has raised red flags in Washington, German Chancellor Angela Merkel last year said Europeans “must really take our fate into our own hands.” Her comments followed bruising G-7 and NATO meetings.

“In Germany, we are thinking about new strategic alliances because we have a feeling that we cannot trust our old alliances and that we need to adapt to a new world order,” said Henning Voepel, director of the Hamburg Institute of International Economics.

China is already Germany’s top trading partner — with a volume of more than $204 billion in 2017, putting it ahead of the United States for the second consecutive year. But it is also waging a trade war with Washington.

More than half of Berlin’s trade with Beijing is handled in the port city of Hamburg, which the Chinese respectfully call “Han Bao” or “Fortress of the Chinese” due to longstanding ties. Every third container in the port either arrives from China or is destined for it.

A total of more than 900 Chinese companies have branches in Germany, including 550 such firms that are based in Hamburg.

Voepel said American trade protectionism was costing the U.S. global influence — with China stepping in to fill the vacuum.

“In economic terms, China has been making rapid gains on the West for quite some time now, and the United States’ apparent withdrawal from globalization is expediting China’s political upsurge,” Voepel said.

A poll published by the Pew Research Center this week found that 67 percent of Germans said their country should cooperate more with China, while only 41 percent said the same about the U.S.

April 27, 201801:52

China is the world’s second-biggest economy, while Germany is fourth.

China and the U.S. have traded tit-for-tat tariffs on goods worth hundreds of billions of dollars in sectors from automobiles to agriculture and energy.

“Europe, and in particular Germany, is very worried about an escalation of the trade conflict,” said Marcel Fratzscher, president of the Berlin-based German Institute for Economic Research (DIW). “The concern is that, having dealt with Mexico, Canada and China, President Trump will pick on Europe next.”

When Donald Trump first threatened tariffs on car imports this year, analysts warned that the measures could seriously impact the revenues of European carmakers.

“It could mean a significant 7 to 10 percent hit on 2019 earnings estimates to the main automakers in Europe,” Daniel Lacalle, chief economist at Tressis Gestion, told CNBC.

Executives with Germany’s leading carmakers — including Daimler, Volkswagen and BMW — are scheduled to attend a White House meeting on trade policies on Tuesday, according to media reports.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde react as President Donald Trump arrives late for a breakfast meeting discussion on gender equality at the G-7 summit in June.Neil Hall / EPA

In his opening speech at the summit, former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said that Trump’s “America First stance will bring about changes for all of us in trade, politics, as well as in foreign and security policies.”

A. Wess Mitchell, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, last month highlighted that Chinese investments in Europe totaled $318 billion last year.

Mitchell said that Beijing “owns or controls almost a tenth of Europe’s entire port capacity” and warned that the U.S. “must not see it as a foregone conclusion that countries will automatically remain friendly to America.”

But Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German ambassador to Washington who is now head of the Munich Security Conference, told this week’s summit that the relationship with China “represents one of the greatest historic opportunities” for both Germany and the 28-country European Union.

Against the backdrop of China’s trade war with the U.S. and supplemented by projects including its modern-day revival of the old Silk Road known as the Belt and Road Initiative, China is investing in trade infrastructure in more than 60 countries worldwide. German cities like Hamburg and Duisberg are becoming major logistics hubs for Europe-bound trains from China.