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France: Banque de France says slightly lower growth and inflation in 2025 and 2026
The Banque de France has published the findings of its start of March Monthly Business Survey as well as interim macroeconomic projections. As was the case the previous month, the survey suggests positive but weak first-quarter growth of between 0.1% and 0.2%. Compared with its most recent medium-term forecasts (December 2024), the Bank has downgraded its growth forecasts for this year and next year to 0.7% and 1.2% respectively. It has also cut its average annual inflation forecast to 1.3% this year and 1.6% next year (based on the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices, HICP). Forecast unemployment remains unchanged, rising to 7.8% in 2025 and 2026.
The findings of the Banque de France Monthly Business Survey – Start of March show that industrial activity continued to grow in February, contrary to last month’s expectations. Conversely, there was little growth in market services and construction. Business leaders expect modest growth in market services in March but little growth in industry and construction. There is some good news: after rising the previous month, the monthly uncertainty indicator has declined in market services and even more so in construction. The Bank puts this decline down to the fact that the French Government has now passed a budget. However, the indicator remains unchanged in industry, with manufacturers citing the international environment as the number one driver of uncertainty, with particular concerns about US import tariffs in sectors such as metalworking, metal products and capital goods. Survey responses also suggest that selling prices and recruitment difficulties continue to normalise.
In light of elements derived from its survey, which it traditionally supplements with other short-term economic indicators, the Banque de France anticipates first-quarter growth of between 0.1% and 0.2%, unchanged from last month. Added value is expected to be driven by market services (after the boost from the Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games washed out in the fourth quarter of 2024), agriculture and energy while holding steady in manufacturing industry and construction.
In its March interim macroeconomic projections, the institution downgraded its growth and inflation forecasts for the next two years. It now expects GDP to grow by 0.7% this year (compared with 0.9% in its December 2024 projections) and 1.2% in 2026 (previously 1.3%). Looking at the detail, the 2025 downgrade is a result of the decline in the contribution of changes in inventory to growth (down 0.2 percentage points/pp), probably as a result of overhang effects. The 2026 downgrade is due to lower growth in investment and public consumption.
As regards inflation, the Banque de France has also downgraded its average annual forecasts for 2025 and 2026 to 1.3% (down 0.3 pp) and 1.6% (down 0.1 pp) respectively, based on HICP. These downgrades are a result of weaker core inflation (i.e. excluding energy and food), revised down 0.4 pp to 1.8% in 2025 and 0.1 pp to 1.8% in 2026. In particular, wage growth was slower than forecast in 2024 (with growth in the average per capita wage coming in 0.3 pp lower than expected, at 2.5%) and is also set to be less buoyant than originally forecast in 2025 (0.4 pp lower at 2.4%), which means services inflation should slow more sharply than previously expected.
Net job destruction should be lower in 2025 than the Bank’s December forecast after stronger growth in employment in 2024. However, forecast average annual unemployment rate remains unchanged and is set to rise to 7.8% for the whole of France in 2025 before stabilising at that level in 2026.
The Banque de France’s forecast takes into account the 10 pp increase in US import tariffs on Chinese goods and China’s retaliatory measures (with a minimal impact on France). However, it does not take into account higher tariffs on imports from Canada, Mexico or the European Union (EU). Uncertainty arising from these measures is, however, factored in, with a negative impact on economic activity in France (reducing 2025 GDP by 0.1 pp). Nor does the forecast take into account the European Commission’s announcements on increased military spending or measures being debated in Germany. Domestically speaking, the Bank has factored in the effects of the 2025 Budget Act passed on 14 February. The forecast is fraught with uncertainty. Risks remain mainly to the downside on growth (potential US tariff hikes and European responses). However, higher military spending constitutes an upside risk to growth at the end of the forecast horizon.
The Bank has endeavoured to quantify the risk associated with trade tariffs, modelling the impact of a 25 pp hike in US import tariffs on goods from the EU. Estimates produced by the ECB-Global model point to a decline in eurozone GDP after a few quarters and a maximum impact of around -0.3% after one to two years. This includes both direct effects on European exports and the indirect effects of a slowdown in the US economy (with monetary policy in particular likely to be more restrictive) and the global economy. But the impact on European GDP and inflation will depend on how exchange rates move in response, how the EU responds, whether Chinese exports shift to the European market, and so on. In other words, there is still plenty of uncertainty. The effects on European inflation are equivocal and would in any case be limited. The economic impact on France would be lower than that on the eurozone as a whole because France’s exports are less exposed to the US market.
The Banque de France’s growth forecasts for 2025 and 2026 are fairly close to the ones built into our December scenario, with growth slightly weaker in 2025 (0.7% as opposed to 0.8%) and subsequently slightly stronger in 2026 (1.2% as opposed to 1.1%). What we find most surprising is the sharp acceleration in wages expected in 2026. Our scenario for France will be revised in the near future, with an updated version due to be published in early April.
High levels of uncertainty around international trade (US import tariffs and reprisals) and recent European announcements (potential additional military spending and a German infrastructure investment plan) mean forecasting is currently a complicated business. However, the assessment put forward by the Banque de France of the impact of a 25 pp increase in US import tariffs on European goods shows that the effect on the French economy should remain fairly limited at the macroeconomic level, though some sectors could fare worse than others. One thing is clear: if there is a trade war, we will all be losers.
Mexico: an economy endangered by US trade tensions
There has been yet another development in the trade war between the United States, Canada and Mexico. Despite the truce expiring and 25% import tariffs coming into force on 4 March, another one-month reprieve has been granted, expiring on 2 April.
Mexico has gone to considerable effort, reducing migrant flows by 66%, putting soldiers on the border, handing drug traffickers over to the US authorities and proposing to match US import tariffs on Chinese goods. The country is even considering withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
Mexican markets have proved relatively stable, with the peso even appreciating slightly, regaining some of the value it had lost since the US election. This reaction reflects the perception that these measures would be temporary and transactional in nature. The new one-month reprieve – first on vehicles and subsequently on all goods – has confirmed this view.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has maintained a cautious but firm stance, earning her a popularity rating of 85%. She had announced a gathering at Constitution Plaza to set out retaliatory measures but left enough time for a deal to be made, which is what ultimately happened.
With Trump’s announcements often (deliberately) contradictory, his intentions remain hard to guess: he announced a one-month delay on 26 February only to confirm the entry into force of tariffs the very next day. Markets have assumed that this is a tactic to apply pressure to help renegotiate USMCA1 in the United States’ favour. Reactions and pressure from Wall Street and US carmarkers also influenced the decision to postpone the tariffs.
Although this new truce offers some respite, the persistent threat of import tariffs is creating uncertainty that is costly for Mexico. Mexico’s goodwill and the high degree of integration of production chains between the two partners suggest that there is hope for a final deal in the form of a new USMCA. In the meantime, the uncertainty is punishing a Mexican economy that is slowing sharply: we take the opportunity to review the situation and the potential implications if import tariffs are imposed.
The Mexican economy went into recession in the final quarter of 2024, contracting by 0.6%, reducing annual growth in 2024 to 1.2%, well short of the beginning of the year forecast of 2.3%. The Bank of Mexico (Banxico) has downgraded its 2025 growth forecast from 1.5% to 0.6% because of the imposition of import tariffs.
The slowdown in the primary and secondary sectors since last summer (with industrial production down 2.6% in the second half of 2024) was exacerbated by weak activity in the tertiary sector, which had previously been supporting growth. Consumption is stagnating and confidence among businesses, and above all consumers, which was previously strong, is beginning to ebb. Growth is increasingly dependent on external demand.
The economic uncertainty is hitting investment particularly hard. Doubts over the future of free trade with the US, Mexican legal reform and high real interest rates (over 6%) are all having a severe impact. Imports of capital goods have declined, as has foreign direct investment (FDI) – which, moreover, is increasingly dominated by reinvestment rather than brand new investment. This highlights a degree of caution on the part of investors who, while they have not given up on the idea of nearshoring, are aware of the risks. Without a robust free trade agreement with the United States, the investment and growth promised in the Mexico Plan2 may not materialise.
As regards the labour market, unemployment remains stable, but job creation and real wage growth are stalling despite disinflation. Funds sent by migrants to family and friends back home in Mexico (known as remesas) are also showing signs of slowing.
Meanwhile, the economic slowdown and restrictive interest rates have helped bring inflation down to 3.6% a year, back within the target range (3±1%) for the first time since 2021 despite peso depreciation. Banxico has eased its monetary policy, cutting rates by 50 bps in February, with a further 50 bps cut expected following its 27 March meeting. The central bank is more focused on the economic environment than on supporting the peso, making a rate hike in response to US tariffs an unlikely prospect. Inflation is slowly falling but pressures remain, notably in services. However, firmly anchored inflation expectations and the most recent numbers offer some room for manoeuvre.
A major slowdown or recession could have a significant impact on Mexico’s already severely constrained public finances. The 2-3% growth forecast built into the budget, which looked optimistic back in November, looks even more so now (with Banxico forecasting growth of just 0.6%). The high deficit of 5.7% in 2024 and the refusal to take substantial steps to increase tax revenue to offset mounting spending pressures (notably for Pemex and social spending) make for an austere budget. Public investment has fallen sharply, down from 2.1% of GDP in 2023 to 0.8% in 2025, as has spending in some areas, notably healthcare3.
Markets have welcomed Claudia Sheinbaum’s pragmatism and commitment to prudent fiscal management. However, in the absence of major fiscal reform, this approach could prove insufficient. Reluctance remains high, which means the political cost would also be high. Yet without such reform, growing spending pressure could endanger Mexico’s fiscal position and heighten fears of a rating downgrade. Moody’s adjusted its outlook from stable to negative in November, while S&P maintained its stable outlook in December, highlighting Mexico’s political stability and fiscal and monetary prudence.
Mexico’s external accounts still appear robust, with a current account deficit (0.3% of GDP) comfortably funded by net FDI in 2024 (1.7% of GDP). Imports and exports rose significantly in the second half of the year, partly as a result of frontloading in anticipation of US tariffs. A similar current account deficit is forecast for 2025, with a reduction in exports – especially if the US does impose tariffs – likely to be cushioned by a fall in imports because of weaker demand. Remesas and FDI inflows are also set to continue to decline.
The imposition of 25% import tariffs on all exports ($490 billion, equivalent to a quarter of Mexico’s GDP, with the automotive sector alone accounting for $130 billion) would give rise to an additional cost of over $100 billion. Who could absorb such a cost? While depreciating the Mexican peso would be an initial mechanical response, that alone would not be enough and would bring with it collateral damage such as imported inflation.
The Mexican economy is facing significant headwinds. Uncertainty caused by internal reform and the external political and trade environment is affecting economic performance, which was already disappointing at the end of 2024. Investment (both public and private) has taken a big hit and consumption is slowing considerably. Risks remain and will be only partly offset by more accommodative monetary conditions, themselves uncertain. The high level of value chain integration and Mexico’s political goodwill suggest that there may be hope for a deal that would allow Mexico to recover and the Mexico Plan to come to fruition. This new round of negotiations will probably tend to favour the US, with more stringent local content requirements, stricter customs checks and higher tariffs on imports from Mexico (and Canada) of goods originating from China.
China: is DeepSeek Chinese markets’ salvation or death knell?
Over the past few weeks, news from Chinese markets has come thick and fast, highlighting some major changes that are currently underway. Three more or less dominant and lasting trends are emerging.
The first trend, as yet unconfirmed, is a “DeepSeek effect”. Unveiled on 20 January, this artificial intelligence, officially developed on a shoestring budget in comparison to the amount invested by the Americans in ChatGPT and Perplexity, has set share prices in the Chinese tech sector – which has had a rough ride over the past few years – soaring.
First, at the end of 2020, there was the unceremonious fall from grace of Jack Ma, the iconic boss of Alibaba who became a thorn in the government’s side because of his vocal public criticism of the Chinese financial system after the IPO of Ant, his group’s financial services subsidiary, was scrapped. Then the regulatory screws were tightened in summer 2021, bringing some sub-sectors (notably online education) to their knees. And let’s not forget investigations into other big names like Tencent and Didi for abuse of market power, mishandling of personal data and monopolistic practices. Chinese tech firms keen to conquer international markets and be listed on the stock exchange, particularly in the United States, also had to give up these ambitions.
This was a time when it was no longer a good idea to flaunt one’s wealth or success, especially if they appeared to have been amassed too quickly and at consumers’ expense. The US’s obvious dominance in artificial intelligence and China’s reliance on chips and integrated circuits from South Korea and Taiwan suggested that China had fallen behind, and that efforts to rein in the new technology sector and its leaders would make it hard for it to catch up again.
Yet, on 17 February, there was Jack Ma, welcomed back into the circle of business leaders from up-and-coming sectors who had been summoned to the Great Hall of the People for a symposium chaired by Xi Jinping himself. The purpose of this orchestrated gathering? To show off the government’s support for the private sector and the latest Chinese innovations and encourage public corporations and private companies to adopt the latter as quickly as possible. Since then, not a week has gone by without a major company (Huawei, Tencent, Baidu) or city (Changsha, Zhengzhou, Shenzhen) announcing some new use for DeepSeek, giving markets a major boost.
Markets appear to want to believe this message. Last September, news of more substantial government support for the economy also unleashed a wave of euphoria on Chinese stock markets. Since then, the effect had subsided slightly, reflecting disappointment at the lack of tangible action, particularly in terms of support for consumer spending. The conclusions of the “Two Sessions”, China’s main annual political gathering due to kick off in Beijing this week, will be another test as to whether or not investors have bought into the government’s strategic priorities for the economy and whether the “DeepSeek effect” has legs.
The second trend – this one deep-rooted – is the reduction in Chinese holdings of US debt. China’s (including Hong Kong’s) share of US bonds held by foreign investors has fallen to 11.9%, its lowest since 2009 and half what it was in 2015. What this means is that the value of sovereign bonds held by Chinese investors declined by $57 billion between 2023 and 2024, and has fallen by $500 billion since 2015, to $759 billion. This reflects China’s desire to diversify its asset holdings, particularly when it comes to its currency reserves. For example, the country has considerably built up its gold reserves, which now account for 6% of its total reserves.
However, these figures only partially reflect reality and must be qualified: although China has almost certainly sought to limit its exposure to US debt since 2010, it continues to hold US bonds through accounts in other countries (notably Belgium and Luxembourg, via depositaries Euroclear and Clearstream) that do not count towards its official holdings of US debt, as well as also investing in US equities. This means it is impossible to say how much US debt China really holds. One thing is certain, though: China wants to officially show itself as being less reliant on the United States.
This desire to diversify is also reflected in the reform announced at the beginning of this year aimed at attracting more medium- and long-term capital to Chinese markets.
The reform applies to insurers, pension funds and mutual funds. It consists of three key measures:
Up to now, Chinese household savings have mainly been captured by the real estate sector, with relatively little investment in financial instruments. The challenge, then, is to offer products designed to meet a medium- or long-term investment goal, the underlying assumption being that the real estate sector is unlikely to ever return to its 2021 levels (in terms of its buoyancy and relative contribution to growth and GDP). There is also the demographic challenge in a country whose population is set to age and decline, and where the twin long-term challenge of paying for older people’s pensions and healthcare will be heavily reliant on putting people’s savings to work.
Chinese long yields have also fallen sharply over the past few months. Driven down by accommodative monetary policy and a deflationary environment triggered by the real estate crisis and weak consumer spending, they have served as a safe haven. China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China, is thus seeking to steepen its yield curve in an international environment where advanced country bonds offer a better risk/reward profile than Chinese bonds. Despite being relatively protected from volatility by exchange and capital controls, China has seen capital outflows over the past few months, reflecting a shift in the kinds of trade-offs made by domestic and foreign investors. Offering new products, other than government bonds, with higher returns would also help retain Chinese savings by making it more attractive to invest them.
Reforming Chinese markets is one of the major structural challenges usually cited as being necessary if China is to evolve into an advanced economy. With lacklustre performances often decorrelated from the real economy, Chinese markets have encountered plenty of turbulence since 2021, connected with technology and real estate stocks in particular. Will the advent of DeepSeek and the authorities’ efforts to show more support for the private sector be enough to attract investors who have tended to abandon Chinese markets? Another point in China’s favour is the fact that, amid falling markets, Chinese shares are cheap, particularly when compared with their US counterparts. With China in the grip of a crisis of confidence mainly resulting in households accumulating precautionary savings, the challenge is to convert those savings into investments in up-and-coming sectors. While this might not solve China’s domestic demand problem in the short term, it is aligned with Xi Jinping’s vision of a modern China at the cutting edge of technology.
Mexico – An overview of three decades of free trade
D. Trump's return to the White House and his tariff threats against Mexico and Canada, suspended until March, could jeopardise the USMCA (United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement), a trade agreement signed in 2018 that replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 2020. NAFTA, the first free trade agreement between developed and emerging countries, came into force in 1994, creating the world's largest trading zone. Thirty years on, without claiming to be exhaustive, what assessment can be made of NAFTA for Mexico?
It is difficult to isolate the effects of NAFTA from those of other Mexican policies and global trends, but we can attempt a rapid assessment with the help of a few key studies and statistics. Assessing NAFTA's impact "fairly" also means judging it against its original objectives.
China – Growth is a "positive surprise", but serious questions remain
China has released fourth-quarter and full-year 2024 growth figures and announced that its 5% target has been met. The consensus of economists, who were not expecting such a performance, found these numbers – even thought they were positive – "surprising".
While China achieving its growth target is nothing new, the slowdown in a number of sectors (e.g. real estate and consumer goods) and the deflationary trend in the economy suggest that the reported growth number may be overstated.
Worries over the strength and, above all, the sustainability of China’s economic model have not faded. There is also growing doubt about the transparency and credibility of China’s statistical machinery.
Lastly, 2025 will necessarily be affected by changes in the US-China relationship, which is currently the leading driver of uncertainty.
China: growth is a “positive surprise” but serious questions remain (abridged version)
China has released fourth-quarter and full-year 2024 growth figures and announced that its 5% target has been met. The consensus of economists, who were not expecting such a performance, found these numbers – even thought they were positive – “surprising ”1. While China achieving its growth target is nothing new, the slowdown in a number of sectors (e.g. real estate and consumer goods) and the deflationary trend in the economy suggest that the reported growth number may be overstated. Worries over the strength and, above all, the sustainability of China’s economic model have not faded. There is also growing doubt about the transparency and credibility of China’s statistical machinery. Lastly, 2025 will necessarily be affected by changes in the US-China relationship, which is currently the leading driver of uncertainty.
The first “surprise” was industrial production, up 6.2% in December after increasing by 5.4% in November, and in particular manufacturing production, buoyed by solar panels, the transport sector (notably cars and spares) and household goods. It seems that, in anticipation of the first tariff hikes and restrictions on free trade more generally, US firms have built up significant inventories, leading to a 16% surge in Chinese exports to the US in December. Foreign trade thus boosted industrial production and made a positive contribution to 2024 growth, adding 1.5 percentage points (pp) – a level not seen (excluding the post-pandemic recovery of 2021) since 2006. China’s trade surplus reached an all-time high of nearly $1 trillion in 2024, by far the largest surplus ever recorded by any country.
On releasing this fourth-quarter and full-year 2024 data, the Chinese authorities also took the opportunity to point out that their monetary and fiscal support efforts were beginning to bear fruit. It is important to acknowledge that the government responded to the slowdown in growth in the first half of the year with a slew of announcements to revive consumer and investor confidence. In December, the last meeting of the Politburo concluded with the authorities committing to implement “more proactive” fiscal policy and “sufficiently accommodative” monetary policy. This very unusual language reflects a genuine change in tone on the part of the authorities and a recognition of the existence of structural factors holding back the economy, starting with weak consumer spending. This press release has yet to be translated into any new stimulus measures, which are more likely to be unveiled during the parliamentary sessions in early March.
The authorities had already announced a 10 trillion yuan plan (around $1.4 trillion) in early November to help get local governments back on an even keel. On top of this, a programme of consumer subsidies was widened to cover more products including not only televisions, phones and tablets but also household goods (microwave ovens, dishwashers and rice cookers), in addition to programmes aimed at vehicles (combustion engine or electric), pay rises for civil servants and monetary policy easing (interest rates, reserve requirement ratio and mortgage rates). Ultimately, the scale of the support package, which equates to around 10% of Chinese GDP (albeit spread over three years), almost seems out of proportion to China’s apparent growth trajectory: while growth was indeed below the 5% target at the point when the authorities unveiled their package in the third quarter of 2024, it was not far off. Even during Covid, when official growth slowed much more sharply (coming in at 2.3% in 2020), the government did not provide the economy with such strong support.
Reading China’s statistics leaves one with the impression that the model does not completely add up. How does one reconcile this 5% growth and its breakdown (with consumer spending adding 2.2 pp, investment 1.3 pp and foreign trade 1.5 pp) with the more negative signals sent by other economic data points? And, above all, why are the authorities working so hard to support what looks like to be an already high level of growth? Three inconsistencies can be identified, the first of which is detailed here; the other two can be found in the full version of this analysis.
The first inconsistency is the mismatch between growth and inflation. Every year, the authorities announce an inflation target – usually 3% – at the same time as the growth target. Yet, while the growth target is met every year, this inflation target has been met just five times since 2000. In reality, if one were to delve into the annals of economic history, it would be hard to find any country without a fixed exchange rate regime that has known such strong and stable growth as China since 2000, without that growth fuelling higher inflation. One can take the view that the Chinese authorities want inflation to remain low because they want the economy to be price-competitive above all else. The reason inflation is so low lies in wage restraint by Chinese firms – both public and private – and the existence of a huge pool of labour fed by the rural population and migrant workers. It is kept low by high levels of competition within the economy, particularly in the private sector, which also drives prices down, since firms tend to be price-takers rather than price-makers in markets. Lastly, China’s interventionist government can control price trends, notably through the existence of strategic inventories and reserves (of metals, oil and agricultural products).
However, since 2020, low inflation has appeared to be something the Chinese authorities have been forced to put up with rather than something they have opted to maintain. It reflects the lack of domestic demand seen in household consumption numbers. There are a number of factors explaining consumer behaviour. First off, Covid hit the labour market a lot harder than official unemployment statistics suggest, with 47 million jobs destroyed during the pandemic; youth unemployment in particular highlights just how difficult it is for the labour market to absorb even the most highly qualified new entrants. The state of the labour market, the scars left by the zero-Covid policy and, of course, the situation in the real estate sector triggered a crisis of confidence among households, altering consumers’ trade-offs between spending and saving. The result was an interruption in the very slow shift in the balance between consumption and investment – a shift that is necessary if China is to successfully transition to a growth model driven by domestic demand rather than foreign trade and investment. The severe real estate crisis, from which China is still struggling to emerge three years after it began, is thus fuelling deflationary pressures in two ways.
And, while Chinese firms could always count on strong external demand to soak up excess production they were unable to sell in the domestic market, it looks like 2025 will raise many questions about the kind of trading environment with which China will now have to contend.
For China, the return of Donald Trump is a potential source of much instability. This could be both a threat and an opportunity. The threat is mainly in the economic arena. Hiking import tariffs on Chinese goods was one of Trump’s campaign promises. And while the Republican line, embodied in particular by the new Secretary of State Marco Rubio, is harder than the Democrat line, growing protectionism with regard to China is one of a small number of issues to enjoy bipartisan support. This means Trump could have Congress’s full backing for his measures, which could take various forms: higher import tariffs – initially an extra 10% but eventually as high as 60% if Trump sticks to his guns; continued restrictions on exports of high value-added technology products; and sanctions on Chinese firms. China expects and is readying itself for these announcements, and for the US’s stance to harden. It knows it must look beyond the “golden age” of globalisation, from which it had benefited so handsomely since joining the WTO in 2001, though this has not stopped the authorities making various attempts to offer the new administration an outstretched hand. Vice President Han Zheng attended Trump’s inauguration and has had many meetings with the new team tasked with overseeing trading relationships and the US-China business community.
Ever since 2018, the authorities have been preparing to “decouple”, notably through a strategy of “dual circulation” aimed at limiting China’s reliance on imports while supporting exporters. These preparations have taken various forms. Chinese firms have already relocated parts of their value chain to third countries, chiefly Mexico and Vietnam. The US increasingly sees these countries as back doors for Chinese goods, which means they in turn could come under pressure to reduce their exposure to China on pain of facing additional restrictions or import tariffs that would directly affect Chinese firms benefiting from the system.
Decoupling has also translated into huge investment in sectors in which China is behind the curve technologically speaking, and in which the US would like to keep China at bay by controlling the exports of US firms (as well as, if it can, firms from other countries) in strategic sectors such as artificial intelligence, semiconductors, aerospace and military hardware. It is hard to know with any certainty how much progress China has made in catching up in these areas. It still appears to be heavily dependent on imports of huge volumes of the most advanced integrated circuits and semiconductors from Taiwan and South Korea. However, the unveiling of DeepSeek, a Chinese chatbot developed – according to the official narrative – with reduced resources and minimal investment, shows that China is far from being left behind and continues to pursue its goal of achieving strategic autonomy.
The main opportunity lies in the geopolitical arena, where the America’s radical, imperialist positions (on Greenland, Panama and Gaza) and its withdrawal from the multilateral (the Paris Agreement, the WHO, the Human Rights Council) and bilateral (dismantling of USAID) architecture could be an opening for China to assert its will. Indeed, the empty space left by the United States could leave China as the leading contributor to some institutions, starting with the WHO, giving it more of a say in the management of these multilateral structures that do so much to propagate standards and ideas. More than ever before, China is also likely to position itself as a protector of the Global South, which is still disorganised and not completely aligned with China’s stance but which US actions against free trade and international aid, on which many countries depend, could help unite.
As we have seen, China has stated its willingness to negotiate. This is not incompatible with its latest statements and measures adopted in response to US tariff hikes. A “super deal” in which Trump emerges as the winner is not impossible. It remains to be seen, of course, how much China might be willing to put on the table – and, conversely, how it might react if trade tensions escalate2.
It is a weakened China that now faces a provocative and combative Donald Trump. Covid-19 left profound scars on the Chinese economy and society, with the real estate crisis, the crisis of confidence among households, manifested by the failure of domestic demand to pick up, and huge levels of sometimes ineffective local government debt revealing the limits of China’s fiscal system. In reality, the country’s entire economic system seems to have passed its peak, revealing some hard-to-conceal inconsistencies. Meanwhile, the Chinese manufacturing complex is triumphant, enjoying the luxury of historic surpluses. This is not such a paradox: China is scouring the rest of the world for the consumers it lacks at home. With protectionism back on the agenda, led by the US, this is a dangerous game – but one that most countries which no longer benefit from the status quo, and which understand that cheaper Chinese products do not replace jobs or industrial activity, are now playing.
In this emerging new world, China can still wield great power, but to do so will require swift and radical reforms to address structural issues specific to the Chinese model: land distribution, free movement of domestic workers and development of safety nets (without falling into the kind of dependency that Xi Jinping so detests) supported by a tax system that allows for a little more redistribution in a country where inequality has skyrocketed. Above all, China will need to inject fresh confidence into disenchanted households who see the social contract – at the heart of the regime – as being increasingly neglected.
This analysis is an abridged version of a study that can be found in full here.
Everything is now related…
Northeastern Congo has long been one of those “symptom regions”, out of the world news spotlights but very revealing of the word geoeconomic dynamics: local tensions intersect with the global race towards controlling resources, with violent results. Tantalum, tungsten, tin and gold have long been classed as “conflict minerals”1. But they are an even greater source of conflict now that everyone knows the climate and technology transitions are impossible without them. Simply put, they are the foundation stone of promises of growth, and therefore a major political priority: according to Guillaume Stechmann, we are now in the era of “metalpolitik”2. As for those countries that compete to become technological superpowers, their dreams will not be fulfilled unless and until they can secure their supplies of metals. China understood this before anyone else3. The geopolitics of value chains is the geopolitics of resources. For the mining Eldorado that is Africa4, this is a vital and urgent issue. There is a need to increase investment (which is disproportionately low relative to the amount of resources), move up the processing chain, retain value and invest it in economic diversification: In short, breaking out the classical Dutch Desease, which has prevented oil revenue from being used to further regional development.
Escalating violence in North-Kivu (the Congo accounts for 42% of the global production of tantalum, with the Rubaya mine alone accounting for 15%5) is no accident: the accelerating race for critical metals is being aided by a unique combination of global geopolitical fragmentation, intensifying global warming and accelerating technological development. Everything points to growing demand for certain metals (according to the International Energy Agency, demand for copper is set to grow by 40% over the next 15 years6), which also increases the risk of supply shortages7, especially given that the increasing miniaturisation of products is not reducing demand but boosting it. According to Guillaume Pitron8, a smartphone might only weigh 150 grammes but requires 150 kg of rock to be treated with water which, as mining and geological engineer Aurore Stephant reminds us, is also one of the victims of the race for metals: miles-long stretches of the Congo River are already contaminated with heavy metals. All of which raises the question of how much a resource truly costs once you factor in negative externalities…
At an even deeper level, what is really at stake behind our addiction to metals is the acceleration principle itself. This principle is held up as the fundamental driving force behind what philosophers and sociologists call late modernity. Hartmut Rosa in particular describes western societies as being characterised by a phenomenon of acceleration that has spread to every area, from fast food to speed dating, from power naps to high-speed computing and from rapid transport to instant communication. In fact, we are moulded by a “desire or felt need to do more in less time”9, accompanied by a fear of not being able to keep up. We must “dance faster and faster just to stand still”10. Rosa talks about the “time-famine” of modern society11. Economics, science and geopolitics are all driven by changes in our collective mindset: the digital revolution is also the culmination of a historical process that pushes us to cram more and more experiences into a given period of time.
Lastly, western societies are also worried about the risk of shortages: unlike during the golden age of globalisation, the world is anxious about resources that are seen as being finite. This worldview bears a distinct resemblance to that of the seventeenth-century mercantilists, who measured power based on the size of trade surpluses, as well as gold and silver mines, and who understood the world as a zero-sum game (“What you have, I cannot have”). The West has now taken a mercantilist turn: welcome to the world of Colbert. In many regions, resource war is becoming the decisive factor shaping the long-term economic, social and political future. While this is patently true in Africa, nickel is also causing disruption in Indonesia, lithium in Chile and Serbia, and so on… not forgetting Greenland, of course!
All over the world, new income streams are intersecting old ones, redefining trade, investment and logistics corridors. The United States is reinvesting in the Lobito Corridor, along which African copper travels to the Atlantic Ocean12, while China, which reportedly controls 74% of Congo’s cobalt, is securing the route to the Indian Ocean. The Gulf States are also stepping up their investment in mining and Dubai Port World is investing in ports. Behind the battle for metals lies a battle for the oceans. And, once countries in the Global South start to renegotiate how revenue is shared, it would be no surprise if new cartels were to emerge. In the meantime, governments want to control resources and develop in-country refining capability13. More and more countries are banning exports of raw products each year, the best example being Indonesian nickel14, where the government controls the entire sector. The issue of price control is also on the table: watch out for OPEC-style groups seeking to control the price of copper or nickel. It remains to be seen how the global economic balance of power between producers and major multinational corporations will shift, particularly in Africa.
The icing on the cake, so to speak, is Trump and his territorial claims, which are throwing the geopolitical Pandora’s box wide open. Ultimately, though, Trump is merely further bolstering a mental shift that has been evident since the war in Ukraine began: many leaders are convinced that, “when all is said and done, force creates law”15. It’s important to point out that this quote from Achille Mbembe16 is addressed not to Russia, China, Azerbaijan or the United States… but to putschist regimes in West Africa. In our mental maps, is the entire world now the Wild West? While this is admittedly not a new question, these open appeals to force mean it is now imperative to know what values we want to protect.
Remember what Rousseau wrote: “The strongest is never strong enough to be master all the time, unless he transforms his power into right and obedience into duty”17. Particularly in Europe, if we are to continue developing our sovereignty in critical metals, it is more important than ever that we not disregard their local consequences. This raises questions about a memorandum of understanding signed by the European Union and Rwanda in 2024 covering supplies of coltan whose origin is disputed by Congo. It also calls into question the granting of $20 million in aid, also to Rwanda, at the end of 2024 to provide a peacekeeping force in Mozambique18, on the basis of now disputed clauses. It will be increasingly important to be wary of simplistic reductions of “metalpolitik” in the face of local situations that are undergoing fundamental change.
This is particularly true of an Africa on the brink of a “historical new political cycle”19 in which demographic, sociocultural, economic and political issues are interwoven in a “perilous and unprecedented self-calibrating movement”: an Africa fortified by “the continent’s technological awakening, the growing influence of diasporas, the accelerating process of artistic and cultural creativity, increasing mobility and traffic, and the frenzied search for alternative development models rooted in local traditions”. However, by unleashing the forces of self-interest, Donald Trump is also paving the way for actors who have no compunction about getting into conflicts and who are greedy for revenue to spring into action. Geopolitical opportunism is what you get when a hegemon is incapable of regulating the international situation – especially when the hegemon himself behaves like a pirate.
The current geopolitical environment thus encourages actors to act in ways that might disrupt many strategic areas, particularly in politically sensitive regions. For example, the Kivu region has long been a hotbed of ongoing rivalry between Tutsis and Hutus where the state’s authority is weak. Rwanda would like it to become a buffer against Congo. It’s also a crucial region for the stability of Uganda, where President Museveni is trying to maintain his popularity in a country where 70% of the population is under 30 years old – but where his capital, Kampala, is also trying to protect exports to Congo and co-financed infrastructure projects.
Ultimately, for both Uganda and Rwanda, mineral wealth is a game changer that is incentivising actors to put their threats into action. Unfortunately, all of this fuels the tired old bogeyman of extractivism; Achille Mbembe warns in his book that this principle of “brutalism”20 could be the world’s future. “The function of contemporary powers is therefore, more than ever, to make extraction possible21. The drilling of bodies and minds is part of it”, writes Mbembe, “[…] as the state of exception becomes the norm and the state of emergency, permanent”22. “The age”, he goes on, “is truly one of the forge and the hammer, ember and anvil, the blacksmith being perhaps the last avatar of the great historical subjects”.