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China’s cull of EV overcapacity will bring little relief to Europe

Beijing’s tried-and-tested industrial policy has a track record of creating fierce export juggernauts

The writer is the geopolitics analyst at Gavekal ResearchA senior official in charge of China’s industrial policy recently vowed to get serious about slashing excess capacity in the country’s electric-vehicle industry, seemingly taking to heart a key trade complaint from the EU. 

The bloc last October initiated an anti-subsidy investigation on imported EVs from China. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen pledged to defend Europe’s auto industry against cheap Chinese exports driven by subsidy-fed overcapacity. But now Beijing is setting about making things right, trade tensions with Brussels will dissipate, surely? Not a chance. 

Overcapacity is a chronic affliction of Chinese industrial policy. Like an adaptable virus, it is difficult to eliminate and requires continuous suppression, which often takes the form of government-orchestrated industry consolidation. The treatment culls the weak. The companies that survive are fitter and meaner and become even more fierce in export markets. 

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