Jan Jambon, Belgium’s deputy PM, has heralded the ever growing econoties between his country and China.
He said that, since 2019, he had “got to know China up close” and, since then, relations between the two had expanded, and trade between the two economies had risen, “totalling a dazzling €40 bn in 2024.”
He was a guest speaker at a celebration of Chinese New Year, organised by the Belgium-Chinese Chamber of Commerce.
Leading Chinese companies,like Hainan Airlines and Bank of China, has invested in Belgium and 300 Belgian investors and companies had done the same in China, he noted.
He praised the work of the Chamber for “bringing like minded people together” adding that “in times of economic turbulence the existence of fair, strong and stable trade relations” is “essential.”
Jambon told the packed audience, which including leading figures from Belgium’s business community, that the successful partnership with China was “rooted in mutual respect.”
At the same event, China’s ambassador to Belgium conceded that his country’s economy has faced “challenges.”
But Fei Shengchao also stressed it was “still doing great”, was, currently, the second largest economy in the world and one of the “major engines” of the global economy.
The diplomat said he was confident his country’s bilateral relationship with Belgium could “withstand any future chaos.”
He noted that relations between China and Belgium were now in their 55th year and that the two sides had withstood “instability” and “chaos” over the past five decades.
He said the coming year would see more “high level” exchanges between the two sides.
It is the Chinese Year of the Horse and, lending an appropriate metaphor, he said that, like a horse, the relationship between Belgium and China was “strong” and noted for its “stamina.”
Drawing on the same horse analogy, Jambon also said the creature symbolises hard work and authenticity “exactly the same meaning it holds” in Chinese culture.
Bernard Dewit, chair of the BCECC, also said that the world needed a “bit of horsepower”, adding that over the past 5 decades or so China had proven to one of Belgium’s “most important” trading partners.
He said the two had been on a “remarkable journey” over that time and, despite “ups and downs, that relations between the two was “still very strong.”
China was one of Belgium’s most important economic partners outside the EU and this would continue, added Dewit, who is celebrating his 30th year as president.
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