BEIJING, Dec 5 (Reuters) – Chinese leader Xi Jinping accompanied French President Emmanuel Macron to Chengdu on Friday, a rare gesture seemingly reserved for the head of Europe’s second-largest economy that highlights Beijing’s focus on Paris in its ties with the European Union.
Even when U.S. President Donald Trump made a landmark visit to China early during his first term in 2017, and Xi lavished him with a private dinner within Beijing’s Forbidden City, the trip was confined to the Chinese capital.
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Investors are watching to see whether a day that began with the French president surprising fellow joggers in the city’s Jincheng Lake Park, before joining Xi at a historic dam site, will end with major commercial deals or a thaw in EU-China trade tensions, given that Macron has been joined on his fourth state visit to China by the heads of some of France’s biggest firms.
“I think they (France) thought that Xi would be in a position to offer a lot because Europe is really preparing this economic security doctrine,” said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, senior fellow at the think tank Bruegel.
“Macron probably felt that given his weight and the fact that France is clearly the one that is pushing the most on economic security, that they would get a deal, but nope.”
Still, the French president will take the publicity win from receiving a rock-star welcome from students at Sichuan University, who crowded around him before a speech in which he urged China to reflect on its role in global affairs.
“We are at a moment of unprecedented rupture,” Macron said. “The world we built after World War II, which was based on what we call multilateralism and therefore cooperation between powers is cracking, fracturing.”
Macron also took aim at China’s notion that the West’s power is waning.
“Plenty of people will try to tell you that Europe is old,” he said. “That the rich countries you find in the G7 are arrogant. That the West is looking down on the Global South. But all of that is a narrative, a fabrication.”
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FACE POLITICAL CONSTRAINTS
Item 1 of 8 French President Emmanuel Macron and Chinese President Xi Jinping speak during a visit to the Dujiangyan site, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site, in Dujiangyan, Sichuan province, as part of Macron’s three-day visit to China, December 5, 2025. REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier/Pool
Beijing may see friendly ties with France as a way into expanding its influence within the 27-strong EU, but is very constrained in its ability to offer Paris major concessions.
The Chinese leader was not expected to sign off on a long-anticipated 500-jet Airbus order, for example, as that would reduce China’s leverage in trade talks with the U.S., which is pressing for new Boeing commitments.
Chinese government advisers say Beijing feels it has the upper hand and is waiting for Brussels to yield and accept a minimum price plan for its EVs rather than the tariffs currently levied on them.
“They (the EU) now recognise the complexity of the issue. After Trump became president again, they realised they are too dependent on the U.S…. Europe is now in need of more reciprocal trade with China,” one advisor said, requesting anonymity as he is not authorised to speak with media.
“The EU should really reflect on its China policy and not tie it too closely to Russia and Ukraine,” he added.
DIVIDE AND CONQUER
China could seek to exploit such divisions.
“It is interesting that they (China) keep raising it (a trade deal) with the member states,” said a European Commission official. “We have no plans whatsoever to have any kind of trade agreement with China,” they added, also requesting anonymity.
Reporting by Joe Cash; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Thomas Derpinghaus
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
