Germany, which is leading the charge against the European Commission's proposed duties, is also the hardest hit by China's rise from making almost no solar panels a decade ago to some 60 per cent of the world's total output. Among the casualties of the adjustment were Germany's Q-Cells, once the world's biggest cell maker.
Yet, German economy minister Philipp Roesler has said that imposing provisional tariffs, which kick in on June 6, is a 'grave mistake'. He is right for two reasons. The traditional fear, dating back to the global trade slump of the 1930s, is that tariffs breed retaliation in kind. That may happen. China imports most of the polysilicon that goes into solar panels, for example, and is mulling whether Western firms sell for less than their costs.
But nowadays the reality is more complex. Where countries like Germany really benefit isn't just by selling to China but by producing there. Consider Volkswagen, the German car-maker. It plans to make 40 percent of its current production in China by 2018, to capitalize on lower-cost labour and growing customer demand.
Across the EU, $16 billion of investment income came from mainland China in 2012. It wouldn't require anything as blatant as trade tariffs for China to make life harder for European companies with big manufacturing bases in the country.
Ultimately trade isn't really about absolute rights and wrongs, but about balancing interests. That explains why despite talk of a return to the 1930s, and China's continuing support for strategic sectors, trade wars haven't happened. The cost of solar panels coming from China may be too low, but as far as tariffs are concerned, the best hope is that politicians continue to see the light.
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