Global chief executives including Apple’s Tim Cook, ExxonMobil chair Darren Woods and HSBC’s Noel Quinn are expected to attend China’s version of Davos in Beijing this weekend, as international criticism mounts that Chinese industrial oversupply could lead to a “slow-motion train accident” for world trade.
Almost 90 CEOs, as well as heads of multilateral
organisations such as the IMF, are expected to attend the China Development
Forum. US executives in particular are returning to the event this year in
greater numbers, attendees said, in a sign that bilateral tensions have eased
slightly after they plumbed new lows last year due to a spy balloon incident.
The organisers of the conference — which is held in the
scenic Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing — announced on Friday that China’s
second-ranked official premier Li Qiang would preside over the event this year
and deliver a keynote speech.
There has been no confirmation of reports that he will
cancel a roundtable with the CEOs, traditionally one of the few annual chances
for foreign business leaders to engage with Chinese government officials of his
stature.
In one apparent signal of support for the event, President
Xi Jinping this week made a rare visit to an enterprise with foreign investment
— German chemicals group BASF’s battery joint venture in central Hunan province
— and his cabinet announced a 24-point plan to support foreign businesses.
Beijing will be seeking to counter international criticism
of its response to weak demand from a property slowdown, which is to further
stimulate manufacturing. This policy is incentivising oversupply and dumping on
global markets, threatening the “deindustrialisation” of trading partners,
analysts said.
Releasing a report this week detailing China’s efforts to
“de-risk” its economy by reducing its dependence on foreign suppliers, Jens
Eskelund, president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, called
for immediate talks between policymakers in China and the EU to avert trade
tensions as European producers struggle to compete with dumped products.
“I think what we see right now is the unfolding of a
slow-motion train accident,” Eskelund said at a briefing on the report. “I
think there’s still a possibility of finding off-ramps, and that’s what we
hope.”
He said overcapacity in Chinese industry was “across the
board” and “I don’t think we’ve seen the full impact yet”.
“There needs to be an honest conversation between the EU and
China on what is this going to be,” he added, “because it is hard for me to
imagine that Europe will just sit by quietly and witness the accelerated
deindustrialisation of Europe.”
Jon Harrison, managing director of emerging markets strategy
at TS Lombard, said China’s manufacturing-led economic model would continue to
generate trade tensions, whether Donald Trump or Joe Biden won the US election
this year.
“Further escalation is inevitable simply because the US and
also Europe will be unable to absorb the flood of manufactured exports from
China, led by high-tech and green transition products,” Harrison said in a
research report.
The CDF and China’s other international flagship conference,
the Boao Forum for Asia on the southern island of Hainan, traditionally follow
the annual meeting of its rubber-stamp parliament, where the party announces
its economic growth targets for the year.
This year’s goal of 5 per cent gross domestic product growth
is considered ambitious by analysts. Foreign direct investment in China plunged
to its lowest level since the 1990s last year as an expected strong recovery
from pandemic-era lockdowns failed to materialise.
Foreign and domestic investors have been rattled by a long
slump in the property sector, which has undermined domestic demand and created
deflationary pressures, leading to stock market falls last year that were only
arrested by heavy state intervention.
Last year’s China Development Forum was marred by the
detention of five local staff of US-based due diligence group Mintz just days
before the opening ceremony. The incident was the first in a series of raids on
foreign consultancies in China on security grounds. One year later, the Mintz
employees are still in detention on undisclosed charges.
Along with the raids on consultancies, which have threatened
investors’ ability to conduct due diligence, businesses have been spooked by
amendments to an anti-espionage law that they see as too broad, as well as new
data security rules that they argue are too vague.
Despite these uncertainties, US business leaders will attend
this year’s event in greater numbers, according to Han Shen Lin, China country
head at advisory consultancy The Asia Group.
Ahead of the forum, Apple’s Cook was pictured walking along
the Bund in Shanghai, while an interview in the state-owned China Daily
newspaper portrayed him as endorsing Xi’s latest Communist party buzzword “new
quality productive forces”, which many interpret as moving up the value chain.
“I think it is essential and it is the future,” the paper
quoted Cook, whose company employs hundreds of thousands of workers in China,
as saying.
Lin said US business leaders attending the CDF tended to
come from financial services, asset management, biopharmaceutical and other
industries that require scale and for which “the rule still applies that if you
have no China strategy you have no global strategy”.
The European Chamber’s Eskelund said everyone at the CDF
would be looking for answers from policymakers on the key challenges facing the
economy, including oversupply, local government indebtedness and the future of
reform.
“I think people are looking for pointers as to where China’s
going,” he said. “All of the talk about sort of unwavering commitment to reform
and opening up — what is that going to mean in concrete terms?”
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