fbpx

U.S. firms in China increasingly fear bilateral tensions will last for years: survey

SHANGHAI:  U.S. companies in China are increasingly fretful that trade tensions between the world’s two biggest economies will drag out over years and nearly a third said their ability to retain staff had been affected, a survey showed.

Half of the firms said they believe soured ties will last at least three years, up sharply from 30% in 2019, according to an annual business sentiment survey conducted by the American Chamber Commerce in Shanghai and consultancy PwC China.

Of those, 27% said they believe tensions will last indefinitely, compared with just 13% last year.

China sanctions Rubio, Cruz and other US officials for ‘Hong Kong-related issues’

“U.S.-China tension is the top concern for the American business community here,” Ker Gibbs, president of the business chamber, said at an event to mark the release of the report.

“This Beijing, Washington dialogue, they need to work this out, because it’s having an impact on business performance here.”

U.S.-China tensions, already high after last year’s trade war, have further intensified this year due to the COVID-19 outbreak and as Washington blacklists or threatens to blacklist Chinese technology companies on national security grounds.

Gold prices surge to record high amid coronavirus worries, U.S.-China tensions

With the U.S. election approaches, President Donald Trump this week again raised the idea of separating the U.S. and Chinese economies, also known as decoupling, suggesting the United States would not lose money if the countries no longer did business.

Underscoring the worries about bilateral tensions as well as economic uncertainty caused by the coronavirus pandemic, only 29% of firms plan to increase their investment in China this year, down from 47% in 2019.

And 32% of respondents said they believe the deterioration in relations was affecting their ability to retain both local and expatriate staff – a view that was particularly pronounced in the education and logistics sectors.

Trump ends Hong Kong’s special status with US, sanctions China

“It’s about the attractiveness of a U.S. brand given this atmosphere of tensions,” Mark Gilbraith, management consulting leader for PwC China.

However, the proportion of companies with a pessimistic five-year outlook receded slightly, at 18.5% versus 21.1% in 2019.

The improvement may be attributable to the Phase One trade deal, the report said, although it noted pessimism remained historically high. Until 2019, firms with pessimistic five-year outlooks had hovered at around 7% for several years.

White House Announces $1 Billion Plan to Create AI, Quantum Institutes

This year’s survey was conducted June 16-July 16 and garnered responses from 346 companies spanning sectors such as industrial manufacturing, automotive, and pharmaceutical.

More than 90% of respondents said they were committed to remaining in China and around 70% of the more than 200 firms surveyed that own or outsource production in China said they did not intend to shift manufacturing to other countries.

Less than 4% are shifting some production back to the United States while 14% are moving some production to non-U.S. locations. The rest represent a mix of moving some production within China and some outside China.

Reuters / Balkantimes.press

Napomena o autorskim pravima: Dozvoljeno preuzimanje sadržaja isključivo uz navođenje linka prema stranici našeg portala sa koje je sadržaj preuzet. Stavovi izraženi u ovom tekstu autorovi su i ne odražavaju nužno uredničku politiku The Balkantimes Press.

Copyright Notice: It is allowed to download the content only by providing a link to the page of our portal from which the content was downloaded. The views expressed in this text are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policies of The Balkantimes Press.

Contact Us