NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
IranMilitaryNuclearTalksTimelineIranianFebruarySignificantDigestCaliforniaDiscoveryCompanyWarnerFridayFacesHumanSecurityStrikesMarketPricesLegalCongressionalFrameworkTensions
IranMilitaryNuclearTalksTimelineIranianFebruarySignificantDigestCaliforniaDiscoveryCompanyWarnerFridayFacesHumanSecurityStrikesMarketPricesLegalCongressionalFrameworkTensions
All Articles
What Merz Beijing trip means for trade and Germany - China relations
thelocal.de
Clustered Story
Published about 21 hours ago

What Merz Beijing trip means for trade and Germany - China relations

thelocal.de · Feb 26, 2026 · Collected from GDELT

Summary

Published: 20260226T150000Z

Full Article

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has wrapped up his first official visit to China. From a major Airbus deal to conversations about Ukraine, Taiwan and Europe’s growing trade imbalance, here’s a look at the issues raised in Beijing. As Chancellor Merz followed a string of Western leaders to Beijing to meet President Xi Jinping, trade dominated much of the agenda. Alongside calls for China to use its influence to help end the war in Ukraine, Merz raised concerns about the widening trade imbalance and the impact of Chinese overcapacity on European markets. Trade Travelling with dozens of business leaders, Merz told reporters that economic competition "played an important role" in conversations during his visit. European businesses complain that China, with its low domestic demand, is flooding Europe with cheap goods. Germany's trade deficit with China hit a record 89 billion euros last year. "This dynamic is not healthy," Merz admitted after talks on Wednesday. "We want to reduce these imbalances, which have arisen primarily from overcapacity in China," he said, vowing that more German officials would visit the country this year. While Merz stressed the need to reduce dependence and trade imbalances, China raised concerns about what it calls Berlin's "over-securities" of trade and high-tech exports. Merz's visit was a "success for both sides", said Wang Dong, a professor at Peking University's School of International Studies. "Germany secured strong economic and business deals, while China deepened strategic communication with Europe's key power." READ ALSO: 'China shock' - Germany struggles as key market turns business rival Companies from both sides reached more than 10 agreements this week across industries including autos, energy and finance, according to the Chinese commerce ministry. But the visit "did not exceed expectations," said Philippe Le Corre, a China-Europe relations expert at the Asia Society Policy Institute's Centre for China Analysis. "Bilateral trade is unbalanced and increasingly so," he said. "I don't expect Chinese investments to come soon and help rebalance that deficit." Airbus orders Merz said China had agreed to purchase up to 120 additional Airbus aircraft, adding that it "demonstrates how worthwhile such trips can be". He did not specify when those purchases would take place. Airbus is Europe's largest aerospace company, and China is a key export market. The new Airbus deal would follow a raft of orders announced by Chinese firms at the end of last year. Air China, Shanghai-based Juneyao Airlines and Spring Airlines, as well as Hong Kong-listed China Aircraft Leasing Group Holdings (CALC) announced purchases totalling around 150 jets. Airbus has yet to publicly comment on the deal announced by Merz. It did not respond to an AFP request. READ ALSO: Everything that changes in Germany in March 2026 Ukraine, Taiwan Merz told reporters following talks with Chinese leaders on Wednesday that he urged Beijing to exert influence on its ally Russia to end the war in Ukraine. "Signals from China are taken very seriously in Moscow," Merz said. "China's voice is heard in the world." Xi said that diplomacy was "key to the issue" and that it was necessary to address the "legitimate concerns" of all sides, according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua. Merz added that Germany wanted China to avoid supplying Russia with dual-use goods its military could use against Ukraine. "I hope that in my talks I was able to foster a little understanding for the fact that the leadership of this country should also contribute to ending the war in Ukraine," Merz told reporters before he left China on Thursday. Merz said he had also touched on the sensitive topic of Taiwan, the self-ruled island China claims as its territory and which it has not ruled out using force to annex. Any "reunification" must be done peacefully, the German leader said. China's 'great power' rise Merz is the latest in a string of Western leaders to visit China since December. "China has risen to the ranks of the great powers," Merz said. "That is also changing our relationship with China." Britain's Keir Starmer, France's Emmanuel Macron and Canada's Mark Carney also visited Beijing, as they recoil from a mercurial United States. READ ALSO: India expected to overtake Germany as world's third-largest economy "European countries now see China as a stable, indispensable partner – not just an economic player, but a critical factor in their foreign policy calculus," said Peking University's Wang. Merz said Germany's trade policy was "not in isolation" from Europe. But visits by individual European leaders are not as strong as a coordinated push, Asia Society's Le Corre warned. "Beijing has been trying to ignore EU institutions for the past few years," he said. "Beijing is always keen to 'divide and rule'."


Share this story

Read Original at thelocal.de

Related Articles

South China Morning Postabout 5 hours ago
Germany’s Merz meets China’s tech vanguard, including Alibaba and Unitree CEOs

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz visited China’s eastern tech hub of Hangzhou on Thursday and met leading figures including those from Alibaba Group Holding and Unitree Robotics, signalling growing international recognition of the country’s robotics and artificial intelligence technologies. Merz had lunch and took group photos with local entrepreneurs, including Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu Yongming and Unitree founder and CEO Wang Xingxing, according to a social media account run by Chinese state...

Al Jazeeraabout 13 hours ago
Why are many Western leaders visiting China?

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is in Beijing, saying he wants to reset ties.

South China Morning Postabout 21 hours ago
Germany’s Merz leaves China with stronger ties as Trump trade battle looms

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has concluded his first visit to China, hailing the “good cooperation” with Beijing as Berlin seeks to rebalance ties with its biggest trading partner amid the unpredictability of the Trump administration. Merz characterised the visit as “worthwhile”, noting that China would buy up to 120 additional aircraft from Airbus SE. The company operates two assembly lines in the northern port city of Tianjin that mainly produce A320 jets for Chinese carriers. In his...

Euronewsabout 23 hours ago
Top five things Germany's Merz should do to make his China trip a success

While the German chancellor is visiting China in a major test of whether he can establish a relationship with President Xi and promote trade with Beijing in favour of the German economy, Euronews asked a China expert and Merz adviser for their top tips.

South China Morning Post1 day ago
China-EU trade ties are at a crossroads. Could tech bridge the divide?

Premier Li Qiang has called for deeper technological cooperation with Germany and highlighted opportunities under China’s latest five-year plan – a move that could help ease tensions with the EU over the war in Ukraine and years of trade disputes. “We support bilateral flows of innovation resources between enterprises and research institutions in both countries,” Li told a symposium attended by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and more than 60 business representatives from both sides. “We can...

South China Morning Post1 day ago
‘China shock’ hits Germany as Merz joins Beijing pilgrimage

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz voiced concerns about Chinese industrial overcapacity after meeting President Xi Jinping, as he seeks to rein in a trade deficit that has grown fourfold since 2020. “This dynamic is not healthy,” Merz told reporters in Beijing on Wednesday, according to Reuters. He also highlighted “risks” from the close connections between the two countries, including problems suffered by German manufacturers last year when China tightened export controls on basic computer chips...