Fears of new China shock as EU industry’s reliance on imports grows
Rising volume of components imported from China prompts warning of cannibalisation of European industries
Editorial perspective
AI-assisted
European manufacturers increasingly depend on Chinese-manufactured components rather than finished goods, creating a subtler but potentially more damaging form of industrial hollowing-out. This shift matters because component dependency is harder to reverse than reliance on consumer products. If geopolitical tensions disrupt these supply chains, European factories cannot simply switch suppliers—they lack domestic alternatives for critical inputs.
The cannibalisation warning reflects concerns that European firms are essentially becoming assembly operations, ceding higher-margin manufacturing to Chinese suppliers while retaining only final-stage production. This erodes industrial capabilities, R&D investment, and technological know-how over time. For investors, this presents portfolio risks across European industrials, particularly in automotive and machinery sectors where Chinese component penetration runs deepest.
Policymakers face a dilemma: protectionist measures could raise costs and inflation, while inaction risks strategic vulnerability. The situation echoes earlier warnings about rare earth dependency, but now extends across broader manufacturing ecosystems. Industrial policy responses will likely shape European equity valuations and competitiveness for years ahead.
Originally reported by Lisa O’Carroll
for The Guardian
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Editorial perspective
AI-assistedEuropean manufacturers increasingly depend on Chinese-manufactured components rather than finished goods, creating a subtler but potentially more damaging form of industrial hollowing-out. This shift matters because component dependency is harder to reverse than reliance on consumer products. If geopolitical tensions disrupt these supply chains, European factories cannot simply switch suppliers—they lack domestic alternatives for critical inputs.
The cannibalisation warning reflects concerns that European firms are essentially becoming assembly operations, ceding higher-margin manufacturing to Chinese suppliers while retaining only final-stage production. This erodes industrial capabilities, R&D investment, and technological know-how over time. For investors, this presents portfolio risks across European industrials, particularly in automotive and machinery sectors where Chinese component penetration runs deepest.
Policymakers face a dilemma: protectionist measures could raise costs and inflation, while inaction risks strategic vulnerability. The situation echoes earlier warnings about rare earth dependency, but now extends across broader manufacturing ecosystems. Industrial policy responses will likely shape European equity valuations and competitiveness for years ahead.