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Chinese exports weigh on Europe more than deficits: imported deflation takes hold

Ongoing story : China: The Failure of Rebalancing and the Persistence of the Supply-Side Model· Part 4/4

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

Chinese exports weigh on Europe more than deficits: imported deflation takes hold
Illustration : Anouk Verhoeven

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.

The Fact

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.

Our Take

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.

To Watch

  • Chinese manufacturing PMI, July 2026
  • ECB decision on Chinese EV tariffs (Q3 2026)
  • EU-China trade data H1 2026 (Eurostat, July)

Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.

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Heinrich VogelÉconomiste macro & banques centrales (Francfort)
Il suit la Fed, la BCE et les grands équilibres macroéconomiques mondiaux.
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Comments (3)

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MacroMarcus 04 Jul 2026 · 07:20

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.

SheffieldSage 02 Jul 2026 · 12:49

Cheaper goods sound great until your own factories start shutting down. Where’s the line between smart shopping and shooting yourself in the foot?

tessa_london 02 Jul 2026 · 12:07

But what’s the alternative-start a trade war and make everything more expensive for consumers?

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