14 May 2016

China Is Building Up Soft Power in Europe

Leonid Bershidsky
MAY 12, 2016

If there's one thing on which Europeans agree with Donald Trump, it's that the U.S. is gradually losing to China. The Middle Kingdom is working hard to improve its image in Europe and investing lots of money along the way. The Queen of England may think Chinese officials are "very rude," but outside Buckingham Palace they are winning influence and friends.

In 2015, a Pew Global Research survey found that a majority of people in major European countries believe China is going to replace the U.S. as the global superpower or that it has already done so:
The same study showed that in Germany and France, more people consider China, rather than the U.S., to be the world's leading economy. That was before China's recent economic troubles began, but those probably won't affect public perceptions greatly: China's size and the prevalence of Made-in-China goods in European stores -- where U.S. ones are hard to find -- will continue feeding this somewhat premature perception
None of this appears to make Europeans particularly happy. On the whole, they still mistrust China more than they do the U.S. According to Pew, 83 percent of Italians and 50 percent of Germans have a favorable view of the U.S., compared to 40 percent and 34 percent with a favorable view of China. Even so, those perceptions have been changing in recent years.




The jump in positive perceptions is, in part, explained by greater exposure to Chinese people. The number of Chinese tourists in Europe doubled in the last four years. Half of them were millennials -- people who have more in common with Europe's younger generation than their parents did with their peers. They are more freedom-loving, more hedonistic and easier to like.

Then there are the Chinese immigrants. They were the second biggest group of newcomers to the EU last year, after Indians -- not counting refugees from Middle Eastern war zones. Small neighborhood stores from Prague to Lisbon are, as often as not, run by Chinese immigrants, hardworking people who keep trading long after everybody closes.

And then there is the Chinese money coming in -- more of it than ever before. Europe is the priority area for Chinese direct investment. Last year, Chinese firms poured a record $23 billion into the EU, against $15 billion in the U.S.

Overall, U.S. investment in Europe is still much more plentiful. Last year, it exceeded $193 billion, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce. Yet in some countries, Chinese investors have been more active than American ones. In Italy, for example -- the country that has seen the biggest jump in China favorability -- the Chinese contributed $7.8 billion to the economy, compared to just $434 million from the U.S. France, too, saw more Chinese than American investment. 

Most of the Chinese money goes into real estate, the hospitality industry and infrastructure. It makes sense that it tends to flow into the same countries favored by Chinese tourists, but there's more to it than that. Asian investors are more at home than Americans with convoluted, sometimes illogical regulation and the corruption that often accompanies it. That may explain why Chinese investors are most active on Europe's periphery, where U.S. business is less interested in going. Portugal is one of the preferred destinations. There has recently been a spate of big Chinese acquisitions in the energy, insurance, tech and food industries, and Chinese businessmen are the biggest beneficiaries of Portugal's popular investment visa program.

Peripheral, hard-up EU nations are also more tolerant of investment by Chinese state-owned companies, which accounted for 70 percent of last year's inflows. That, in part, explains why Chinese diplomatic efforts have lately focused on Eastern Europe. In March, President Xi Jinping visited Prague to discuss, among other things, big investments in infrastructure projects that would link China's new "Silk Road" transport corridor -- Xi's pet project -- to central Europe.

In late June, Xi is coming to Belgrade. Serbia is only an EU candidate, and not the most diligent one, but that only makes it easier for China to make inroads. State-owned Chinese companies have been building bridges and power plants in Serbia, investing in the kinds of projects that build goodwill and cause no resentment.

As China expands its influence into the Western world, Europe is far more receptive than the U.S. "Europeans are more conflicted and generally less negative in their feelings toward China than Americans because there is less of a great power rivalry and some also feel the need at times to distance themselves from U.S.-led initiatives," Yukon Huang of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace wrote in a recent article.

Although the U.S. is still perceived as the more natural ally, China's patient drive for acceptance in Europe is beginning to pay off, especially in the needier, weaker parts of the continent. It's not a big problem that the Queen doesn't care for Chinese bureaucrats: They'll keep coming back.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Leonid Bershidsky at lbershidsky@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Marc Champion at mchampion7@bloomberg.net

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