China president visits France, Serbia and Hungary: What is at stake?

Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan wave as they arrive at Orly airport, south of Paris, Sunday, May 5, 2024.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan wave as they arrive at Orly airport, south of Paris, Sunday, May 5, 2024. Copyright Stephane de Sakutin/AP
Copyright Stephane de Sakutin/AP
By Amandine Hess
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Chinese president Xi Jinping kicked off a Europe trip on Sunday. Amid a time of global tensions, what issues will be on the table?

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China's leader is on a three-country tour of Europe at a time when Sino-European relations are far from perfect.

After stopping in France on Sunday and Monday as part of the 60th anniversary of the establishment of Franco-Chinese diplomatic relations, President Xi Jinping will travel to Serbia and then to Hungary.

A packed programme is on the cards for Xi's first European state visit since the COVID-19 pandemic.

What are the economic and strategic stakes of this highly political tour?

War in Ukraine

The Chinese and French presidents will first address the issue of the war in Ukraine.

With China being "one of Russia’s main partners", French President Emmanuel Macron will try to encourage Beijing "to use the levers it has over Moscow" to "contribute to a resolution of this conflict," according to the Élysée.

While authorities in Beijing claim to be officially neutral towards the conflict and call for peace, they have never condemned the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Trade between Russia and China in 2023 helped mitigate the impact of economic sanctions against Moscow, meanwhile. 

"The main concern is obviously all the support that can be given to China in terms of dual-use technologies and that can contribute to renewing all Russian military equipment," Elvire Fabry, senior researcher at the Jacques Delors Institute in charge of trade geopolitics, told Euronews.

Macron and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will face the challenge of sending "a clear signal" that Europe "is ready to sanction more Chinese companies for their critical support of Moscow’s war effort," added Janka Oertel, Director of the Asia Programme of the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR).

French President Emmanuel Macron, right, welcomes his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping prior to a meeting at the Elysee Palace, in Paris, Monday, March 25, 2019.
French President Emmanuel Macron, right, welcomes his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping prior to a meeting at the Elysee Palace, in Paris, Monday, March 25, 2019.Thibault Camus/Copyright 2019 The AP. All rights reserved

Commercial policy

Debate on trade policy issues also promises to be strong.

The objective of France's number one is to improve access for French and European companies to the Chinese market and to obtain fairer "competitive conditions" for them, the Élysée said.

"Agreements are still being negotiated," it added.

After reaching a record €396 billion in 2022, the EU’s trade deficit with China fell by 27% in 2023 to €291bn, according to Eurostat.

"European concerns are very much focused on the imbalance that is creating in the green technology sector," Fabry said.

The European Commission has launched several investigations into Chinese subsidies to electric cars and solar panels suspected of distorting competition.

However, Macron’s two main messages on Chinese support for Russia’s military and Chinese practices suspected of distorting the market are unlikely to impact Beijing’s behaviour, Oertel said.

"Xi is not on a mission to repair ties, because from his point of view, all is well. He argues that there are no over-capacities [of green technology] and that what happens between China and Russia is just normal trade", she explained.

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Serbia and Hungary

The Chinese president will continue his tour in Hungary and Serbia, widely seen as being closer to Moscow.

"With these two visits to these two European capitals, Xi Jinping demonstrates that he is actively working to establish an authoritarian axis in international politics," German MEP Reinhard Bütikofer said.

The two countries are also considered as the gateway to China’s Road and Belt Initiative in Europe.

A worker on the site of the reconstruction of a railway line between Budapest and Belgrade, a project funded mainly by China.
A worker on the site of the reconstruction of a railway line between Budapest and Belgrade, a project funded mainly by China.Darko Vojinovic/Copyright 2019 The AP. All rights reserved.

The flagship project aims to rebuild a railway line between Budapest and Belgrade, mainly financed by China. It will transport Chinese goods from the Greek port of Piraeus onto Europe. 

In Hungary, the proliferation of Chinese electric vehicle battery factories across the country demonstrates the economic ties between Budapest and Beijing.

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Construction of a battery plant for electric vehicles built by the Chinese company CATL in Debrecen, Hungary, on Tuesday, May 23, 2023.
Construction of a battery plant for electric vehicles built by the Chinese company CATL in Debrecen, Hungary, on Tuesday, May 23, 2023.Denes Erdos/Copyright 2023 The AP. All rights reserved.

The visit coincides with the 25th anniversary of the NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade in 1999. 

It is an opportunity for Xi Jinping to "create images whose audience is not in Europe, but mainly in the global south", such as an alleged "NATO overreach ... US selective use of international law [or] warmongering" which would contrast with "China’s commitment to peace, dialogue and diplomacy", Oertel concluded.

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