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CT Zhao's avatar

To my mind, the whole "overcapacity" debate really shouldn't be turned into an EU-vs-China battlefield. My instinct is always to shrink a conflict rather than blow it up — so let's instead zero in on one of the people who's so fond of the word "overcapacity": Stéphane Séjourné. As a French left-wing politician, he wants to use "overcapacity" as an all-purpose tool to pull off two things at once — protectionism at home, and meddling abroad dressed up as "supply diversification." The first is aimed at the domestic economy; the second is a way of declaring that the EU stands independent of both China and the US.

On paper, it's a lovely idea.

But personally, I can't stand watching political elites wrap themselves in the flag to push reckless trade-protection measures just to feed a domestic political appetite. Turning diplomacy and trade into a stage for political theater back home is a classic piece of European-politician foolishness. During Séjourné's stint as an adviser to the economy minister, I never once saw him put forward an effective policy to actually revive the French economy. All this "overcapacity" and "subsidy-screening" talk looks less like strategy and more like currying favor with France's big incumbents — steel and autos, for example.

And this is the broader sadness of Europe's left-wing politicians: their political narrative is "borrowed" from America. When it comes to political ideas and models of social governance, Europe doesn't really have a homegrown bureaucratic class of its own — even concepts like "overcapacity" and "subsidy screening" have to be imported from the US. For all that Europe keeps insisting on its political and industrial independence, in spirit it's a vassal of either the US Democrats or the Republicans. And I don't say that as a Chinese person hurling insults or curses — I say it with genuine sympathy, even pity. I honestly rarely see anything local or pragmatic in the bureaucrats of France, Germany, or the Netherlands. Spain and Hungary, oddly enough, come across as a bit more normal.

(Historically, French left-wing politicians do seem to enjoy nitpicking anything China-related, as a way of proving they're standing on the "democratic" side of the international community. Some of the right-wing ones, by contrast, come off as more pragmatic.)

The Sir Toby Papers's avatar

Now if China was not able to produce more than what was required for domestic use then clearly much of the world including EU would be in big trouble.

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