Advertisement

Russia and China’s Trade Relationship is Becoming Lopsided

0
787
Moscow has become increasingly reliant on China as the war in Ukraine drags on. 
Advertisement

Russia and China’s trade relationship has become increasingly lopsided

Phil Rosen 
Jul 19, 2023, 11:24 AM EDT

  • Yale data shared with Insider illustrate that China is now Russia’s largest import and export partner.
  • Yet, Russia remains just the 11th most significant exporter to China. 
  • Thousands of companies have pulled out of Russia in the last year and that’s made Moscow increasingly reliant on Beijing. 

Not long ago, Russia was on steady footing as a major energy exporter and key player in global markets. But 16 months into its “special military operation” in U-----e, and Moscow has fallen far in the global trade and financial order.

Thousands of corporations have taken their business elsewhere, Western nations have imposed historic sanctions, and its financial system is a shadow of what it once was.

That’s left V------------n’s regime increasingly reliant on China

Yale figures shared with Insider shows that China is now Russia’s largest import and export partner by a big margin, but the relationship is heavily lopsided. While the bulk of Russia’s exports go to China, the country is far down on the pecking order when it comes to Beijing’s biggest trade partners. Meanwhile, China is Russia’s biggest source of imports by far. 

“Clearly Russia is much more dependent on China to provide it with the imports and advanced manufactured products it needs, while Russian markets represent a negligible secondary opportunity for Chinese businesses,” Yale researcher Jeffrey Sonnenfeld said. 

China is now Russia’s largest import and export partner. 

By Sonnenfeld’s calculations, China imports more than double the value of goods to Russia compared to Germany, Russia’s second-largest importer.

______________________________________________________

Advertisement

______________________________________________________

By comparison, Russia is the 11th largest importer of Chinese goods, with the US, Hong Kong, and Japan taking in far more as China’s three biggest trade partners.

China and Russia have an asymmetric trade relationship. 

Even Russia’s spiraling car industry reveals China’s growing influence. Soaring prices, weak consumer spending, and a supply shock for foreign-made vehicles have made the Chinese car brand Geely the only non-Russian brand to see an increase in sales. With a sharp 88% annual jump in sales, Geely now commands an 11% market share for Russia’s auto sector.

Meanwhile, over the last year, P---n has pointed to Russia’s current account surplus as evidence of a resilient economy. But those numbers are fading fast thanks to dwindling energy export profits and a lack of trade partners besides China, which has been able to buy Russian goods at hefty discounts.

Over the last quarter, the Bank of Russia reported a 93% drop in its current account surplus.

While the relationship appears fairly one-sided, some strategists think Moscow still has some leverage, and P---n isn’t guaranteed to become subservient to President Xi Jinping, according to think tank writer Mikhail Korostikov. 

“The relationship between Russia and China is by no means perfect, but the shared interests of both countries’ leaderships and the strategic logic of the confrontation with the West create a solid foundation for reasonably equal cooperation,” he said. “Within that interaction, China does have a certain opportunity to turn Russia into its vassal — but, crucially, it has no compelling reasons to do so.”

Source: Markets Insider

______________________________________________________

Advertisement
______________________________________________________

______________________________________________________

If you wish to contact the author of a post, you can send us an email at voyagesoflight@gmail.com and we’ll forward your request to the author (if available). If you have any questions about a post or the website, you may also forward your questions and concerns to the same email address.
______________________________________________________

All articles, videos, and images posted on Dinar Chronicles were submitted by readers and/or handpicked by the site itself for informational and/or entertainment purposes.

Dinar Chronicles is not a registered investment adviser, broker dealer, banker or currency dealer and as such, no information on the website should be construed as investment advice. We do not support, represent or guarantee the completeness, truthfulness, accuracy, or reliability of any content or communications posted on this site. Information posted on this site may or may not be fictitious. We do not intend to and are not providing financial, legal, tax, political or any other advice to readers of this website.

Copyright © Dinar Chronicles

Advertisement

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here