German chancellor Olaf Scholz in a visit to on Monday said Chinese cars would be welcome on the market in Germany but warned against the use of unfair trade practices.
While Germany’s economy has benefited from for products like cars to chemicals, ties have been strained with German companies arguing they face unjust market barriers in China.
What did the chancellor say?
Scholz, with several leading German executives, made the remarks while speaking at Tongji University in Shanghai.
He noted that, when Japanese and South Korean cars were launched onto the market in Europe, there had been fears that they would completely conquer the market in a one-way shift toward Asia.
“Nonsense!” said the chancellor. “There are Japanese cars now in Germany and German cars in Japan,” he said. “And the same applies to China and Germany.”
“At some point, there will also be Chinese cars in Germany and Europe. The only thing that must always be clear is that competition must be fair. In other words, that there is no dumping, that there is no overproduction, that copyrights are not infringed,” Scholz said.
What else is happening on the trip?
Whie in China’s largest city, Scholz was also due to visit an innovation center of German plastics manufacturer Covestro.
Later on Monday, the chancellor is set to dine with the Party Secretary of Shanghai, Chen Jining.
The second stop on the chancellor’s three-day visit, Shanghai comes after a first day in Chongqing, in the country’s southwest. On Tuesday, he will head to Beijing for talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang.
Scholz’s visit comes while the European Union ponders punitive tariffs to protect the bloc’s manufacturers from more affordable imported Chinese electric cars.
The chancellor is being accompanied by a dozen chief executives, among them the bosses of German vehicle manufacturers Mercedes-Benz and BMW, as well as the chemical company BASF. Volkswagen, Europe’s largest car manufacturer, is absent from the trip.
rc,jsi/rm (dpa, Reuters)
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