The European Commission has been pushing for an 'overcapacity instrument' to counter Beijing’s practice of flooding markets with cheap goods, a strategy officials warn could bankrupt European rivals. While the bloc’s trade deficit with China remains a profound economic threat, internal divisions have stalled a unified response. A paper signed in late May by France, Italy, the Netherlands, and Lithuania called for a tougher stance on structural overcapacity, yet Germany—whose trade deficit with China is projected to exceed €100 billion this year—remained notably absent from the signatories.
Beijing’s influence is further complicated by strategic investments across the continent. Spain, initially a proponent of the tougher stance, withdrew its support after receiving significant Chinese capital for energy and digital infrastructure. EU officials are also tracking Chinese-funded manufacturing hubs in nations like Morocco, where over $6 billion in investment has fueled an electric vehicle industry that now threatens European market share. EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič has flagged this as a critical vulnerability, urging firms to diversify suppliers to mitigate reliance on Chinese output.





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