Germany wants deeper, fairer economic co-op with China: Merz
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz (L) and Chinese Premier Li Qiang at a meeting of the German-Chinese Business Advisory Committee at the Great Hall of the People, Beijing, China, Feb. 25, 2026. (EPA Photo)


China and Germany want to enhance cooperation, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Chinese Premier Li Qiang said in Beijing on ⁠Wednesday, as Merz kicked off a visit aimed at resetting ⁠ties amid a widening trade imbalance and global uncertainties.

Merz told Li that Germany attached great importance to maintaining and deepening its intensive economic exchanges with China, its largest trading partner last year, ​while emphasizing the need to ensure fair cooperation and open communication.

"We have very ​specific ⁠concerns regarding our cooperation, which we want to improve and make fair," said Merz, who faces a tough balancing act of redefining an economic relationship that is increasingly unfavorable to German interests.

Li called on both sides to work together to safeguard multilateralism and free trade, in reference to U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war, which has upended the global trading system.

"China and Germany, as two of the world's largest economies and major countries with important influence, should strengthen our confidence in cooperation, jointly safeguard multilateralism and free trade, and strive to build a more just and fair global governance system," Li said.

China is seeking to pitch itself as a reliable economic partner, in contrast to the United States, as Europe struggles to address vulnerabilities in its supply chains ⁠and ⁠worries about growing dependence on China.

Europe is witnessing an acceleration of concerning trends in China, Europe's Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic told the European Parliament on Tuesday, citing China's growing dominance in key manufacturing sectors, a rising imbalance in bilateral trade, and falling market share of EU companies in China.

Restoring ties with China

Merz, on his first visit to China, becomes the latest European leader seeking to reset ties with China after Britain's Starmer and Canada's Carney earlier this year. At the same time, Beijing touts the benefits of engaging with its massive consumer market and advanced manufacturing base.

Engagement between Europe's largest economy and China could set the stage for EU-China relations this year.

Merz ⁠comes accompanied by a delegation of 30 firms, including top carmakers such as Volkswagen and BMW, which are acutely feeling the strain of Chinese competition – contributing to a growing trade imbalance that has sparked concern in Berlin and led to calls for protectionist policies.

Germany's ​heavily manufacturing-based economy has been particularly hard hit by competition from China's manufacturers, Rhodium Group's China analyst Noah Barkin ​said in a recent research note.

The face of China's market, once coveted by foreign businesses for its wide consumer base and rising spending power, has changed in the last several years, with a ⁠slowing economy capping ‌consumer demand and ‌manufacturing overcapacity increasingly pushing domestic firms to look for opportunities abroad.

In editorials ahead ⁠of the visit, Chinese state media emphasized the potential for EU-China ‌cooperation to become a stabilizing force while U.S. tariff policies upend global trade.

Xinhua News Agency, in an editorial published early on Wednesday, cited a German ​chamber of commerce survey finding that ⁠innovation gains in China are feeding back into German headquarters.

State-backed newspaper the Global ⁠Times said concerns about competition with China would be outweighed by the lure of China's massive market.

"Rhetoric such as 'systemic ⁠rival' and 'de-risking' has at times ​complicated Germany's China policy," it said in an early Wednesday editorial.

"Yet the enthusiasm and actions of the German business community speak louder than political slogans."