CHINA AND EUROPEAN UNION COUNTRIES: DO CHINESE PARTNERSHIPS BOOST COOPERATION RESULTS?

Authors

  • CÁTIA MIRIAM COSTA
  • YICHAO LI

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.DT0123.1

Keywords:

Belt and Road Initiative, Chinese Partnerships, EU, FDI, Trade, Investment

Abstract

The People’s Republic of China and countries of the European Union (EU) have signed multiple diplomatic documents for cooperation under different types of conception. France was the first EU country to start a comprehensive partnership with China in 1997, and, by 2021, among the 27 EU member countries, 19 had already established partnerships with China (the exceptions were Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Slovakia, Slovenia, andn Sweden). Since the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) was announced in 2013, 18 EU member states (except Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden) have signed MoUs with China. What this study investigates, however, is why some of the countries have opted to sign a BRI MoU but not establish partnerships with China. On the other hand, some countries that have long had partnerships with China have deepened or strengthened those partnerships, yet have not signed a BRI MoU. The current study is therefore motivated to pose this main research question: To what extent does the Chinese partnership framework facilitate practical cooperation between EU countries and China? The study also poses these secondary questions: What are the main differences between these cooperation documents? Do such differences in documentation result in discrepancies in the nature of cooperation? From a bilateral state-to-state perspective, the study compares joint statements pertaining to Chinese partnerships with different EU countries, analyzing how closely they are tailored to each European country’s specificity. Through reviewing the literature, the authors gather data concerning the outcomes of cooperations on trade and investment between China and EU member states, and analyze any official diplomatic documents available.

Author Biographies

CÁTIA MIRIAM COSTA

Researcher at the Centre for International Studies (ISCTE-IUL, Portugal) and invited professor at the same university. She is also Director of the Global Iberoamerica Chair of the European Institute of International Studies, Stockholm, Salamanca. She coordinates two international Erasmus+ projects and is ISCTE’s alternate representative in UNESCO’s Academy programme. She has numerous publications in English, Portuguese, Spanish, and French. Her main areas of research are Chinese Foreign Policy, Macau, Sea and Globalisation, International Communication, and Discourse Analysis. She was an advisor to the Secretary of State of Internationalization of the Portuguese Republic until April 2022.

YICHAO LI

Ph.D. from the Institute for Research on Portuguese-speaking Countries, City University of Macau. She also received a master’s degree in comparative civil law (in Chinese) from the University of Macau, and a Bachelor of Laws from Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology, China. From 2021 to 2022, she has been a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for International Studies (ISCTE-IUL, Portugal). Her current research interests are the Belt and Road Initiative and Portuguese-speaking countries.

Published

2023-09-28