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    Home > Headlines > Chinese goods dumping started before tariffs, ECB study finds
    Headlines

    Chinese goods dumping started before tariffs, ECB study finds

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on November 11, 2025

    2 min read

    Last updated: January 21, 2026

    Chinese goods dumping started before tariffs, ECB study finds - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:import and exporteconomic benefitsEuropean economiesfinancial markets

    Quick Summary

    An ECB study reveals that Chinese goods dumping in Europe began due to weak domestic demand, not US tariffs, affecting EU markets since 2021.

    China's Export Surge to Europe Linked to Domestic Demand Weakness

    FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Weak domestic demand rather than U.S. tariffs is the main reason China is dumping surplus product on European markets at rock-bottom prices at the expense of domestic producers, a European Central Bank study argued on Tuesday.

    Pressure has been growing on the European Union to act on surging imports from China as U.S. tariffs force Beijing to find new markets for products it now struggles to sell.

    "Escalating trade tensions between the United States and China might result in a further diversion of Chinese exports to Europe," the ECB argued in an Economic Bulletin article.

    "However, the rise in China’s exports to the EU predates the latest tensions and coincides instead with the onset of weakness in domestic demand in China," the ECB added.

    The ECB argues that the start of the current trend can be dated back to 2021, when a housing downturn in China depressed domestic demand and started weighing on housing investment, an import-sensitive sector.

    Meanwhile state-led manufacturing investment, aimed at stabilising growth, created excess capacity and led firms into price wars, prompting them to redirect sales toward foreign markets, the ECB argued.

    "To expand abroad, firms must gain competitiveness," the ECB argued. "They typically do so by reducing short-run marginal costs and prices, or by accepting narrower profit margins, and in some cases even losses."

    Meanwhile a host of factors in China like weak consumer demand, trade policies and a strategic focus on the domestic manufacture of key products, keep curbing import demand and point to a lasting shift in China’s import behaviour, leaving the trade gap on a widening path.

    (Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Chinese exports to Europe surged due to weak domestic demand.
    • •US tariffs are not the main reason for China's export strategy.
    • •The trend began in 2021 with China's housing downturn.
    • •Excess capacity in manufacturing led to price wars.
    • •China's import behavior shows a lasting shift.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Chinese goods dumping started before tariffs, ECB study finds

    1What is dumping?

    Dumping refers to the practice of selling goods in a foreign market at prices lower than their domestic market prices, often to gain market share or offload excess inventory.

    2What is excess capacity?

    Excess capacity occurs when a company or industry produces more goods than it can sell, leading to lower prices and potential financial losses.

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