China-Britain relations Archives - Focus - China Britain Business Council https://focus.cbbc.org/tag/china-britain-relations/ FOCUS is the content arm of The China-Britain Business Council Wed, 23 Apr 2025 08:56:54 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://focus.cbbc.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/focus-favicon.jpeg China-Britain relations Archives - Focus - China Britain Business Council https://focus.cbbc.org/tag/china-britain-relations/ 32 32 Foreign Secretary David Lammy visits China and meets with CBBC https://focus.cbbc.org/foreign-secretary-david-lammy-visits-china-and-meets-with-cbbc/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 06:30:00 +0000 https://focus.cbbc.org/?p=14792 The Rt Hon David Lammy MP recently spent two days in China, emphasising that the UK will take a consistent, strategic and pragmatic approach to its dealings with the country Prior to leaving for China on what is only the second such trip by a top UK minister in six years, Mr Lammy said that “engagement with China is pragmatic and necessary to support UK and global interests…we must speak…

The post Foreign Secretary David Lammy visits China and meets with CBBC appeared first on Focus - China Britain Business Council.

]]>
The Rt Hon David Lammy MP recently spent two days in China, emphasising that the UK will take a consistent, strategic and pragmatic approach to its dealings with the country

Prior to leaving for China on what is only the second such trip by a top UK minister in six years, Mr Lammy said that “engagement with China is pragmatic and necessary to support UK and global interests…we must speak often and candidly across both areas of contention as well as areas for cooperation in the UK’s national interest”.

launchpad gateway

Mr Lammy’s visit began with meetings with Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang (the most senior of China’s vice premiers) and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Beijing on Friday, 18 October.  

In his meeting with Mr Lammy, the vice premier referred to the recent phone call between President Xi and Prime Minister Starmer, during which they reached an important consensus on strengthening cooperation and exchanges across various fields, providing clear direction for the development of bilateral relations. Mr Ding said: “China is willing to work with the UK, with a strategic and long-term perspective, to build a stable and mutually beneficial relationship. By upgrading practical cooperation across all sectors, both countries and their peoples will benefit, and greater momentum will be injected into global peace and prosperity.”

In his meeting with Mr Lammy, Chinese Foreign Minister Mr Wang said that “China-Britain relations… now stand at a new starting point” and stressed that competition among major powers should not be the backdrop of this era.

The Foreign Secretary mentioned scope for “mutually beneficial cooperation” in areas such as climate, energy, science, trade and tech, while cautioning that Britain would “always put its national interests and national security first”.

On Saturday 19 October, Tom Simpson, Managing Director, China, CBBC, co-chaired a business roundtable in Shanghai with the Foreign Secretary.

The roundtable provided an opportunity for Mr Lammy to hear the views of British businesses from across a diverse range of sectors, including finance, healthcare, consumer, automotive, education, and energy.

During the roundtable, Mr Lammy highlighted the new government’s approach to establishing stable and consistent engagement with China. Lammy also reflected on the role British business will play in supporting the UK government’s economic growth mission and net zero ambitions.

On behalf of CBBC and our members, Tom Simpson provided insights into the challenges and opportunities facing British business in China, while highlighting the importance of attracting Chinese investment to the UK.

19/10/2024. Shanghai, China. Foreign Secretary David Lammy delivers a speech at the MAP Museum on his visit to China.
Photo: Ben Dance / FCDO

“As I said in my comments to the Foreign Secretary, his visit to China is a real boost for the morale of the British business community,” Simpson commented. “We are encouraged by the new government’s approach and the prospect of sensible and hopefully sustained engagement with China. British business needs the backing of our government more than ever to ensure our companies can continue to succeed in China, and channel the economic benefits back to the UK”.

Following the roundtable with British business, the Foreign Secretary met with Shanghai Mayor Gong Zheng before attending a reception at the Museum of Art Pudong organised by the British Council and the Shanghai British Consulate. The reception was attended by around 200 representatives from business, education, arts and culture. 

Commenting on Mr Lammy’s China visit, CBBC Chief Executive Peter Burnett emphasised that the organisation is, “very encouraged by the Foreign Secretary’s visit to China. This is the first senior visit from the new government and sends a positive signal about the vital importance of our bilateral relationship”. 

“CBBC believes that such visits are key in underpinning strong economic engagement which not only supports our member companies with business in China but will also contribute to the government’s growth agenda”.

The post Foreign Secretary David Lammy visits China and meets with CBBC appeared first on Focus - China Britain Business Council.

]]>
Finding ‘normal’: China, Britain, and the search for dialogue https://focus.cbbc.org/uk-china-relations-and-the-search-for-dialogue/ Wed, 16 Oct 2024 06:30:00 +0000 https://focus.cbbc.org/?p=14682 Sam Godsland, Senior Programme Director at Wilton Park, explores how Britain can grow a new tradition of ‘normal’ dialogue with China in a rapidly changing world The visit of David Cameron and Xi Jinping to the Plough Inn at Cadsden, Buckinghamshire in 2015 has come to be seen as the defining moment of the ‘Golden Era’ of UK-China relations. The scene suggests a sense of normality; two men arrive in a pub,…

The post Finding ‘normal’: China, Britain, and the search for dialogue appeared first on Focus - China Britain Business Council.

]]>
Sam Godsland, Senior Programme Director at Wilton Park, explores how Britain can grow a new tradition of ‘normal’ dialogue with China in a rapidly changing world

The visit of David Cameron and Xi Jinping to the Plough Inn at Cadsden, Buckinghamshire in 2015 has come to be seen as the defining moment of the ‘Golden Era’ of UK-China relations. The scene suggests a sense of normality; two men arrive in a pub, and one of them – ostensibly the local – orders them both a drink. They wear dark suits, and their ties are both off as if they are colleagues having just finished work. They sit side-by-side at the bar, exchanging observations about (you imagine) the world at large. 

However, things are not quite as normal as they seem. For a start, there are actually three men, one of whom is an interpreter, because the men don’t speak the same language. One of them – the non-local – slightly rushes his pint, not waiting for it to settle. The body language is awkward, almost forced.   

However, what is really abnormal about this exercise is not the setting, but the fact that these men are the leaders of Britain and China. This outing therefore represents the closest interaction by people in their position in more than 400 years. In fact, it is only the third state visit by a Chinese leader ever, the first one having taken place in 1999.   

The sheer abnormality of Britain and China actually talking to each other is beautifully brought out in ‘The Great Reversal’, the new book by Professor Kerry Brown, Director of the Lau China Institute.  Professor Brown has turned his attention to this relationship now because he feels that the UK lacks a national narrative about its relationship with China. This assertion is amply illustrated throughout his highly readable book, in which monumental involvements in each country’s history unfold with barely any interest or acknowledgment by the British public.   

I was primarily intrigued by what this book might reveal about the history of dialogue between the two countries. Wilton Park is a dialogue-focused organisation, and we have our own history of dialogue with China, as well as ambitious plans for the future. However, as a nation, we find ourselves at what feels like a low point in our exchanges with China. Protests in Hong Kong, Brexit, Covid-19, and the changing cast of UK Prime Ministers, have all contributed to major channels of interaction falling away. Bilateral economic and financial dialogues, people to people dialogues, high level strategic dialogues, and a host of schemes to promote joint development and prosperity have almost all lapsed. What Professor Brown’s book tells us is that this is not a historic nadir, but more like a reversion to the mean.  

There are three primary take-aways from this book when it comes to UK-China dialogue. The first is that trade has always led the way. Queen Elizabeth I, facing a squeeze on trade routes in Europe due to competition with Spain, initially dispatched missions eastwards in the 1650s, bearing letters for the Chinese Emperor (unfortunately none was delivered, despite four attempts). The motivation for opening contact between the two nations was explicitly commercial, seeking trade ‘which consisteth in the transporting outward of such things where of we have plenty, and in bringing in such things as we stand in need of’.   

This original ‘growth mission’ was to inform countless subsequent embassies, delegations and incursions into Chinese territory. Despite the infamous failure of the McCartney embassy in 1793, the East India Company and ambitious independent traders such as Jardine and Matheson gradually assumed a controlling position over China’s trade, and therefore its engagement with the world. This led initially to the addiction of the British to Chinese tea, before featuring some of the least edifying episodes of mercantilism in British history, when exports of opium to China eventually gave rise to two hopelessly one-sided conflicts (or ‘Opium Wars’) in the nineteenth century.   

Only after literally hundreds of years did this trade-based contact broaden into anything diplomatic or cultural (although military and missionary adventures feature in the middle pages of the book). The Chinese initially declined a diplomatic presence in the UK, before settling in Portland Place in 1877. Only after the collapse of the Qing dynasty, the invasion of the Japanese, the conclusion of the Second World War and a civil war between Chinese Nationalists and Communists, did national leaders come close to actually talking to each other. Ambassadorial-level relations were initiated in 1972, and the leader of the opposition Edward Heath met Mao Zedong in Beijing two years later; Queen Elizabeth became the first British sovereign to visit China in 1986 (shortly before Wham!).   

Now, as then, the rationale for Britain and China’s interaction is primarily economic, even if it contains many additional components. As Sir Keir Starmer and David Lammy make plans for visits and dialogues as part of their own growth mission, we can expect commercial relations to be uppermost in their minds. 

The second lesson is that diplomacy is hard. There are numerous tragicomic examples in the book of British consuls and diplomats trying and failing to make a connection with their opposite numbers. In one passage, Brown describes how, of the consular officials who learned the fiendishly-difficult Chinese language and travelled to engage late-Qing China from 1855, 11 had died, nine had returned home on sick leave, while several remained at their posts in a precarious state of health; of the 90 arrivals between 1897 and 1920, five committed suicide and many suffered a nervous breakdown or serious physical ailment. Those diplomats that did manage to keep body and soul together had to endure the resentment and aloofness of their Chinese counterparts, and constant accusations from the British trading community that they were accommodating the Chinese. It is therefore not a surprise that a China-focused career in the diplomatic service is not high among the ambitions of British undergraduates (judging by the tiny numbers of those studying Mandarin). 

The third lesson is that relations between the two countries have always been asymmetric. In fact, the historical period during which Britain and China could legitimately see eye-to-eye was vanishingly brief. Brown identifies the 1997 Hong Kong handover as the point at which the balance of power changed, or perhaps the true turning point was China’s accession to the World Trade Organisation in 2001; either way, the tables turned frighteningly quickly. The UK and China had economies of equal size in 2005, but by the time Cameron and Xi visited the Plough Inn, the Chinese was already two-and-a-half times larger.   

What really struck me about this story is the contrast between the perennial failure of UK-China dialogue and the normality of British contact with other major powers. British leaders have exchanged state visits to certain European capitals for the best part of a thousand years. Many European royal families are not only familiar, they are actually family, having intermarried regularly through the centuries. In recent history, the British have fought and died alongside American and Commonwealth (and particularly ‘Five Eyes’) partners, bonding our people closely. Shared language, culture, and philosophy continues to sustain interactions with our closest European, Atlantic and Antipodean partners – meanwhile, there has never been a British Prime Minister or monarch who spoke Chinese (former Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd is the closest we have had). 

This barren history of dialogue puts Cameron and Xi’s visit to the pub in a very different light. He was, as Professor Brown’s book shows, far more ambitious than any of his predecessors (or indeed successors). If Britain is to grow a tradition of ‘normal’ dialogue with the Chinese, it will, therefore, have to be almost from scratch. We will have to be patient, wrestle with the language, work within economic realities, and risk being driven ever-so-slightly mad. But in a world which is changing so quickly, establishing a sense of normality would be both an advantage and a significant accomplishment. 

launchpad gateway

This article was first published by Wilton Park

The post Finding ‘normal’: China, Britain, and the search for dialogue appeared first on Focus - China Britain Business Council.

]]>