Macro Jul 2, 2026 at 16:363Add to bookmarks

Beijing isn't just exporting electric cars and solar panels—it's exporting its disinflation. And Europe is absorbing the effects more than it admits.
A Goldman Sachs analysis published on July 2, 2026, reveals that Chinese exports are weighing on European growth more than the simple bilateral trade deficit. In 2025, China exported ~$2,900 billion worth of goods globally, with a growing share heading to Europe—EVs, batteries, solar panels, and machinery—at unmatched prices. The combined effect: squeezed margins for European manufacturers, deflation in manufactured goods, and pressure on the automotive, chemical, and steel sectors.
The mechanism is more insidious than a deficit: unable to stimulate its domestic demand (~38% of GDP from household consumption vs. ~68% in the US, World Bank 2025), China exports its overproduction at rock-bottom prices—a structural deflationary pressure on European industry since 2023. This complicates the ECB’s actions: service inflation remains high in the eurozone while goods deflation curbs industrial wage growth. Merz’s response (€10 billion, July 2) attempts to address this, but the structural shock far exceeds this scope.
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
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Europe’s deflation problem isn’t just China’s exports-it’s the result of a decade of misallocated capital chasing financial assets over real capacity.
Cheaper goods sound great until your own factories start shutting down. Where’s the line between smart shopping and shooting yourself in the foot?
But what’s the alternative-start a trade war and make everything more expensive for consumers?
China: The Failure of Rebalancing and the Persistence of the Supply-Side Model