Last year marked a record for bilateral trade (
$227 billion according to Russian estimates, and
$240 billion on Chinese numbers), but no one knows when it will be surpassed: Russia’s imports from China
have declined for two months in a row.
As for Chinese investment in Russia, there has been no mention of it: Beijing is faithful to its strategy of not creating industrial competitors on its borders, while the Chinese’ setting up shop at firms where Western investors were “squeezed out” may be fraught with complications for Chinese goods in Europe and the US. Thus, the pause in Russia-China economic cooperation today is no less noticeable than that in their political dealings.
How long might the pause last? In my view, Beijing has no need to take any definite action right now. The Russia-Ukraine war can only escalate in the coming months: Moscow will seek to expand its offensive, while Kyiv will try to prove to its Western allies that, with the aid coming from them, it is able to effectively resist Russian aggression. Meanwhile, the Kremlin has explicitly
stated that it has no one to talk to in Ukraine. According to Putin, it is necessary to communicate with the country’s “legitimate leadership,” in question since Volodymyr Zelensky’s term formally ended this week.
Economically, China will be monitoring the actions of the US, being cautious in supplying Russia with critical components – many experts
say that up to 90% of the electronics used by the Russian military-industrial complex today comes from China, and limited supplies may cause problems in two or three months – and turning down any major deals.
There is no doubt that Moscow and Beijing will work to set up a semi-legal nonbank settlement system (there is much
talk about the possibility of a blockchain payment system within the BRICS bloc), where Western financial monitoring will have a hard time tracking transactions. How quickly such a system will emerge and how popular it will be is still impossible to even imagine. Meanwhile,
negotiations on opening fully functioning branches of Russian banks in China, it seems, have been called off.
The events on the calendar this summer are unlikely to be game-changing: a decision on whether and how to confiscate Russian assets is unlikely to be made either at the conference on support for Ukraine in Germany or the G7 summit in Italy. In addition, the Washington NATO summit is likely to punt on the issue of Ukraine’s membership in the alliance. Therefore – and I am hardly the first to say it – any meaningful moves are likely to come only after the US elections: if Trump wins, events will begin to develop much faster; and in the event of a Biden victory and the status quo holding, decision-makers will have their work cut out for them.
Russia-China relations today are somewhat reminiscent of US-Ukraine relations – even though Moscow, of course, is not as dependent on Beijing as Kyiv is on Washington, many analogies can be drawn.
China accounts for 30.3%
of Russian export earnings, while if we take into account the fact that the Chinese are beginning to settle through barter or illiquid assets, then it is more than 40%.
China leading the anti-Western coalition