Xi's export machine gets lift from US move to strongarm allies
Published in Business News
As Xi Jinping battles unprecedented deflation and shrinking investment, he’s betting that China can sell more and more goods to the world to drive growth. To that end, Donald Trump’s threats against key U.S. allies are coming at a good time.
China’s world-beating export juggernaut played a key role in helping Xi hit his 5% growth target for 2025, accounting for the largest share of expansion since 1997, according to data published Monday. That papered over deep cracks in the domestic consumer economy: The country’s property market remains moribund, deflation marked its longest slump since the 1970s and investment posted its first-ever annual decline.
While Trump’s tariffs prompted China to find other markets for its goods, spurring some countries like Mexico to put new duties on certain Chinese products, the U.S. leader’s latest threats against Europe are providing some breathing space for Xi. Last week, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney signed a deal with China that rolled back electric vehicle tariffs and talked about moving close to Beijing in the “new world order.”
Xi will seek similar wins on trade when UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German leader Friedrich Merz head to Beijing in the coming weeks. Trump himself is set to visit China in April, the first of four scheduled meetings this year with Xi.
“China’s trade friction risks will decline significantly this year,” said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Group, citing the U.S.-China trade detente as another stabilizing factor. “It’s precisely because we think exports will stay strong we don’t think China will significantly boost stimulus for domestic demand,” he added. Hu forecasts Chinese shipments to expand 6% from a year ago in 2026.
Chinese investors were unmoved by Monday’s growth numbers, with the benchmark CSI 300 Index of onshore stocks closing flat. Economists largely expect Beijing to dole out only modest stimulus this year, with a Bloomberg survey in December forecasting just 20 basis points of cumulative policy interest rate cuts.
Although Trump’s moves may buy Xi time to tackle problems such as the yearslong housing crash, the risk is policymakers in Beijing take their foot off the gas when it comes to rebalancing the economy more toward consumption. Furthermore, if Trump pushes his expansionist foreign policy too far and uses force to take Greenland, the ensuing shockwaves in geopolitics could bring market volatility that Beijing will hardly welcome.
Germany’s Finance Minister underscored the changes unfolding on Monday, declaring that a “limit has been reached” on how much provocation the European Union could take from Trump, after the Republican leader announced new tariffs. Calling the threat “unacceptable,” French President Emmanuel Macron plans to request the EU activate its most powerful trade retaliation tool, the so-called anti-coercion instrument, which was initially conceived to counter countries such as China.
In a sign the bloc is calibrating its stance toward Beijing more broadly, it’s now weighing a plan to accept minimum prices on electric cars in place of tariffs. That’s a potential boon for domestic giants such as BYD Co., which are locked in bitter price wars intensifying China’s fight with deflation.
If his Greenland tariff threats are implemented, the hikes of U.S. levies on European partners since Trump’s return to the White House could reach as high as 37.2 percentage points by June, much higher than those imposed on China, according to estimates by Bloomberg Economics.
Beijing is also pushing to revive the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, which was frozen in 2021 amid growing tensions over human rights issues and then U.S. President Joe Biden’s push for transatlantic cooperation on China. That deal would expand European companies’ access to the Chinese market and break down investment barriers for Beijing in the bloc, although EU officials have shown little public interest in resurrecting it.
“The Chinese are putting a lot of pressure,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia Pacific economist at Natixis. “Maybe the EU will give it to them because they’re desperate now with Trump.”
When Starmer becomes the first British leader to visit Beijing in nearly eight years later this month, Xi will also be pushing for more market access. Illustrating the opportunity, Chery Automobile Co.’s Jaecoo brand only launched in the UK in January 2025, but now already sells more than Honda, Citroen or Porsche.
Policy pivot
The impact of China’s unstoppable export machine on domestic policy was on display last year, when shipments defied America’s steepest tariff regime since the 1930s to drive a record trade surplus.
Authorities initially vowed to take “extraordinary” measures to defend the world’s No. 2 economy as Trump returned into office, and followed through by raising the official budget deficit to the highest in more than three decades. But as Chinese exports found new markets, officials shifted to paying down local government debt, contributing to a rare decline in infrastructure investment.
“In the next five years — or at least in the foreseeable future — exports will still be an important pillar of growth,” said He Wei, China economist at Gavekal Dragonomics, saying this was partly due to strong demand in the global economy. “This transition from external to domestic demand will be a mid- to long-term one.”
With only incremental steps on offer to boost consumer spending, economists expect the GDP deflator — which measures economy-wide prices — to stay negative in 2026, or recover to zero, with domestic demand too sluggish to generate big reflation. That means corporate revenue and workers’ wages will remain under pressure, and China will help cool inflation overseas via cheaper exports.
So far, the improvement in prices is driven by temporary factors. While the decline of consumer prices has bottomed out in recent months, that’s largely down to a surge in gold prices, and more recently cold weather conditions driving up the cost of fresh vegetables. A handful of commodities targeted by a policy campaign to crack down on overcapacity has seen a modest rebound, such as polysilicon, a key raw material for making solar panels.
The underlying fundamentals causing China’s economic problems haven’t shifted, with the property crash yet to find a floor.
For China, Trump’s treatment of U.S. allies has improved Beijing’s situation from a couple of years ago, but plenty of issues also remain on the world stage, said Dongshu Liu, an assistant professor focusing on Chinese politics at the City University of Hong Kong.
That creates risks of more trade barriers down the line.
“Even if you cooperate with China, the factors that made you cautious in the first place haven’t disappeared,” he added, citing distrust over Xi’s support for Russia after its invasion of Ukraine. “We won’t see a massive turnaround but it’s definitely an opening.”
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