China–Switzerland relations
Map indicating locations of China and Switzerland

China

Switzerland

China–Switzerland relations officially began in 1918.[1] Relations between the two nations have been excellent, particularly in economic affairs, although relations were somewhat strained during the ethnic Uyghurs controversy, and the Hong Kong National Security Law in June 2020.

History

Among the first Swiss visitors to China were Jesuit missionaries in the 17th century. Their watches were popular with the Qing court and as a result a few Swiss watchmakers began exporting watches to China. However, it was only with the popularity of chinoiserie in the 18th century that economic interest in China spread in Switzerland.[2][3] In the 19th century, Swiss merchants and missionaries profited from informal imperialism in Switzerland and enjoyed the consular protection of other powers. Although the Swiss media tended to be critical of Western imperialism in China, even during the Boxer Rebellion and the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War in 1949, most newspapers ignored Swiss involvement in it. With the establishment of diplomatic relations between Switzerland and the Republic of China in 1918, Swiss citizens were officially entitled to extraterritoriality and they formed part of the foreign community in the Chinese treaty ports, enjoying the same privileges as citizens of the imperial powers in China. Swiss exports to China included pocket and wrist watches, indigo, and textiles, while imports from China were dominated by silk and foodstuffs. After the Second World War, Swiss criticism of the Nationalist regime increased. Switzerland relinquished extraterritorial privileges in 1946 but relations between the two nations were distant, and Switzerland was more interested in protecting its economic interests in China than in supporting the Nationalists in the Chinese Civil War. As a result, the Swiss government was the fifth Western nation to recognize the PRC on 17 January 1950.[4][5]

Bilateral relations

The embassy of China in Bern. China also has a diplomatic mission to the United Nations Office at Geneva and the other international organisations in Switzerland.

Until China established diplomatic relations with France in 1964, Switzerland was the only country in central and southern Europe to have a Chinese Embassy. As a result, the PRC's Embassy in Bern and the Consulate in Geneva were in charge of China's political and economic relations with France, Italy, Germany, and other countries.[6] China-Swiss economic relations have accelerated since Deng Xiaoping's economic reforms in the late 1970s.[4] Switzerland's trade with China is not in deficit as other industrialized nations trade with China. Two way trade between the two countries is growing at an annual rate of 20–30 percent.[7] In 2007, Swiss exports were valued at 5.4 billion Swiss francs or 5.36 billion US dollars.[7] The same year, China was already Switzerland's top trading partner in Asia, ahead of Japan.[7]

Swiss firms have been investing in China substantially over the last decade. There are approximately 300 Swiss firms with more than 700 branches operating in China with a total employment of 55,000 people.[4] Chinese firms have a small but growing presence in Switzerland as a base to expand in Europe.[7] Chinese firms are not only entering markets for basic consumer goods such as textiles and shoes but also for chemical intermediates, pharmaceuticals, high technology parts, and telecommunications.[7]

China and Switzerland signed a free trade agreement in 2013.[8] Direct exports from Switzerland to China accounted for 22.8 billion in that deal, which was heralded as a "real milestone" by then Swiss President Ueli Maurer. Switzerland has a positive trade balance with China, and both countries are expected to profit from export guarantees, protection of intellectual property and financial cooperation between their largest banks.[9] Switzerland thus became the first continental European country[10] and the largest economy to conclude a free trade deal with China.[11][12]

In January 2015, during the World Economic Forum, the Swiss National Bank and the People's Bank of China signed a memorandum of understanding on the establishment of renminbi clearing arrangements in Switzerland.[13]

2020

In June 2020, Switzerland openly opposed the Hong Kong national security law.[14]

In September 2020, the Swiss Federal Intelligence Service wrote that:[15][16]

The gap between the Western liberal model and China's authoritarian state capitalism will widen further. Despite the fact that China's threat to the world had not been visible in Switzerland, reports on the administration's disinformation campaigns, censorship and political repression of its opponents in Hong Kong and ethnic minorities in Tibet and Xinjiang marked the growing international perception of the threat posed by China.

In October 2020, Switzerland signed a joint statement on the human rights situation in Xinjiang and the recent developments in Hong Kong, delivered by Germany and denouncing China.[17]

2021

In 2021, the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (FDFA) ascertained the rapid development of the Chinese economy, and concurrently the number of businesses in Switzerland that maintain contact with China was also rising. Switzerland had advocated "a balanced, coherent and coordinated approach to China", according to the federal department. Switzerland has a long history of close cooperation with the People's Republic of China (PRC). In 1950, Switzerland was one of the first European states to recognise the PRC. The newly drafted China Strategy 2021–24 was a pragmatic process that involved all departments of the Federal Administration. China and Switzerland had signed a free trade agreement in 2013 to further strengthen bilateral relations, particularly in key sectors, including green tech.[18][19]

2022

A 2022 Swiss business in China survey analysed the key challenges for Swiss enterprises there. The survey found that business relations between the two nations were "at their highest ever levels on the back of high profit and re-venue growth expectations for 2022". The broad optimism for economic cooperation was illustrated by the full recovery of the growth lost due to the COVID-19 pandemic, yet within 6 months, Swiss business confidence went from its highest recorded level to its lowest, similar to the 2015 Chinese stock market crash and the lifting of the Swiss peg to the Euro.[20]

In 2022, Switzerland called on China to close the Xinjiang internment camps where at least one million ethnic minority Uyghurs were reportedly being held.[21]

2023

Since 2010, China had been Switzerland's largest business partner in Asia, and its third largest globally. According to the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) Swiss business activity in China was expanding with the implementation of the stock connect program. Despite Washington's demands to review audit records, which Beijing resisted on national security grounds, and "the risks of Chinese companies failing to meet the expected corporate governance standards", Swiss economic relations with China were at their highest level, including with lithium battery producers, electronics and medical device makers.[22] In June 2023, the demand for Swiss watches in China appeared also in a significant upward trend, contributing to increased export volumes of Swiss watches overall.[23] In the high technology sector, Swiss aerospace companies and academic institutions increased their cooperation with Chinese space exploration in connection with the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS).[24]

Economic ties

Equity market

A 'stock connect program' was approved in late July 2022 by Chinese and Swiss regulators. More than 10 Chinese companies will have access to the SIX Swiss Exchange through global depositary receipts (GDRs). In 2022, the companies already raised about $1.5 billion for mainland China.[25]

Trade

See also

References

  1. Yufang Zhou, Die Exterritorialitätsrechte der Schweiz in China (1918–1946), Frankfurt am Main und Bern 2003
  2. Stephan Steinmann, Seldwyla im Wunderland: Schweizer im alten Shanghai (1842–1941): Eine Untersuchung ausländischer Präsenz im China der Kapitularverträge, unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Zurich, 1998
  3. Yvonne Boerlin-Brodbeck, "Chinoiserien in der deutschsprachigen Schweiz", in: Paul Hugger (ed.), China in der Schweiz: Zwei Kulturen in Kontakt, Zürich, 2005, pp. 27–40.
  4. 1 2 3 Ariane Knüsel, Framing China. Media Images and Political Debates in Britain, the USA and Switzerland, 1900–1950, Farnham 2012. https://www.routledge.com/Framing-China-Media-Images-and-Political-Debates-in-Britain-the-USA-and/Knusel/p/book/9781138109292
  5. Official diplomatic telegram on 17 January 1950 from President of the Swiss Confederation, Max Petitpierre, to Mao Zedong in the Dodis database of the Diplomatic Documents of Switzerland
  6. Ariane Knüsel, "Small Country-Great Importance: Switzerland and the Chinese Presence in Europe during the 1950s and 1960s" https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004388123/BP000004.xml"
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Two-way trade blossoms with China
  8. Cheng, Wenting (2023). China in Global Governance of Intellectual Property: Implications for Global Distributive Justice. Palgrave Socio-Legal Studies series. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 69. ISBN 978-3-031-24369-1.
  9. Swiss free trade deal underscores China's globalisation: Li Archived 16 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine haveeruonline (retrieved 26 May 2013).
  10. First European country after Iceland according to "SwissBanking – China and Switzerland: A longstanding relationship". Archived from the original on 5 April 2016. Retrieved 25 January 2015. (page visited on 25 January 2015).
  11. China seals first free-trade deal with Switzerland, BBC News, 24 May 2013 (page visited on 25 January 2015).
  12. Marc Lanteigne, "The Sino-Swiss Free Trade Agreement", Center for Security Studies (CSS) of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, 24 May 2013 (page visited on 25 January 2015).
  13. "Fresh progress in China-Switzerland financial cooperation", press release of the Swiss National Bank, 21 January 2015 (page visited on 24 January 2015).
  14. Lawler, Dave (2 July 2020). "The 53 countries supporting China's crackdown on Hong Kong". Axios. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  15. (in French) Swiss Federal Intelligence Service, "La sécurité de la Suisse 2020", September 2020 (page visited on 14 November 2020).
  16. Frédéric Koller (14 November 2020). "Quelle stratégie suisse envers la Chine ?". Le Temps (in French). Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  17. Joint Statement on the Human Rights Situation in Xinjiang and the Recent Developments in Hong Kong, Delivered by Germany on Behalf of 39 Countries, United States Mission to the United Nations
  18. Federal Department of Foreign Affairs FDFA. "Federal Department of Foreign Affairs FDFA. A balanced, coherent and coordinated approach to China" (19 March 2021). Accessed 17 April 2023
  19. 'Free Trade Agreement Between the Swiss Confederation and the People's Republic of China' unctad.org. Accessed 17 April 2023.
  20. Casas, Tomas and Musy, Nicolas and Xiao, Zhen, "The Swiss Business in China Survey 2022" (12 September 2022). Retrieved 17 April 2023.
  21. "China-Swiss trade talks stall over rights issues – newspapers". Reuters. 30 May 2022.
  22. K KAWASE (10 February 2023). 'Switzerland helps China Inc. satisfy its expansion for overseas listings'. nikkei.com. Accessed 17 April 2023.
  23. "Swiss Watch Exports Jump Again in June as Demand Stays Strong" (July 20, 2023) swissinfo.ch. Accessed 25 July 2023.
  24. "Western companies drawn to China’s lunar research station project" (7 July 2023) SCMP. Accessed 9 July 2023.
  25. "Chinese Companies Flock to Switzerland to Raise Money With New Stock Listings". Cheng, Evelyn (1 August 2022). CNBC. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
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