Chinese Business Enters the EU Via Eastern Europe

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29 October, 2010.

The classroom walls at the Hungarian-Chinese bilingual primary school here are decorated with Chinese calendars and banners.

Chinese lanterns hang from the ceilings of the main entrance hall.

There are stacks of new Chinese language books in the staff room, provided by the Chinese authorities,

who also send two teachers a year, depending on the school’s needs.

The school cafeteria, however, serves only local fare.

“No Chinese food, at least not yet,” said Viktoria Schaff, one of the teachers.


29 October, 2010.

The classroom walls at the Hungarian-Chinese bilingual primary school here are decorated with Chinese calendars and banners.

Chinese lanterns hang from the ceilings of the main entrance hall.

There are stacks of new Chinese language books in the staff room, provided by the Chinese authorities,

who also send two teachers a year, depending on the school’s needs.

The school cafeteria, however, serves only local fare.

“No Chinese food, at least not yet,” said Viktoria Schaff, one of the teachers.

Which is probably just as well, because the makeup of the state-financed school,

the only one of its kind anywhere in Eastern Europe,

has changed a lot since it opened in 2004

in response to the growing numbers of Chinese working in Hungary

and the rising number of Chinese companies investing in the region.

The first year, there were 86 pupils, all from China or other Asian countries.

Of the 229 students who started this month, 90 are Hungarian.

“More and more Hungarian parents are sending their children here,” Ms. Schaff said.

“Their parents see the huge opportunities opening up for them

as China becomes more and more important.”

Education is not the only area in which China is making inroads in Central and Eastern Europe.

From the Baltic states to the Balkans, Chinese companies, flush with money,

are buying real estate and competing for public infrastructure contracts,

especially as Poland and Ukraine work at breakneck speed

to jointly play host to the 2012 European soccer championship.

They are also investing in the manufacturing of products like electronics and chemicals

to gain a foothold inside Europe’s expansive single market.

In Poland last year, a Chinese consortium won the contract

to build two sections of a highway from Lodz to Warsaw.

It was not a huge deal, but it was the first time that a non-Polish or non-European company

received a contract that will be partly financed by the European Union.

“Some Polish companies were not happy,”

said Henryka Bochniarz, president of the Polish Confederation of Private Employers.

“They said the Chinese were subsidized by the Chinese government.

But frankly, as long as they meet the procurement rules, you can’t exclude them.”

Ms. Bochniarz added that the Chinese companies also hired Polish workers and engineers.

Indeed, Chinese companies are becoming increasingly active in Poland,

where the work force is well educated and still relatively inexpensive

compared with those in Western European countries.

Trade flows have also changed.

“China used to mainly export textiles, shoes and tea to Poland,”

said Tomasz Ostaszewicz, director of the bilateral economic cooperation department at the Polish Economy Ministry.

“Now China is our main supplier of electronic goods.”

As recently as 2007, Chinese investment in Poland,

and across Eastern Europe as well, was insignificant.

“Chinese investments in Poland amounted to 70 million euros in 2007,”

or about $92 million at current exchange rates, Mr. Ostaszewicz said.

“The envisaged amount of Chinese investment for 2010 could amount to 500 million euros.”

That, he added, would create 3,230 jobs.

The investments, which usually take the form of joint ventures,

are spread across manufacturing sectors,

from electronics and machinery to packaging, plastics and paper production.

In Hungary, the Wanhua Industrial Group recently acquired a strategic stake in BorsodChem,

a leading polyurethane producer in Central and Eastern Europe.

Wanhua, which is based in the northeastern city Yantai, between Beijing and Shanghai,

is the largest producer in the Asia-Pacific region of isocyanates,

a polyurethane raw material used by the construction and automobile industry

as well as for making household appliances and footwear.

The company sells to the United States and Middle Eastern markets,

and was looking for a presence in Europe,

said Howard Ding, deputy general manager of Wanhua.

“BorsodChem gives us a manufacturing base in Europe,” he said.

“It means better access to the European market and better means to serve our customers.”

BorsodChem’s headquarters is in Kazincbarcika,

a town in northeastern Hungary that was built in 1949

as a local center for the fertilizer and chemical production sector.

It was privatized in 1991, sold shares to the public five years later,

and was bought in 2006 by two private equity funds,

Permira and Vienna Capital Partners, which began to restructure the company.

They then started looking for investors to help pay for the construction of a plant

and to provide much needed capital for a company that is highly leveraged.

It has loans totaling close to 1 billion euros.

In June, Wanhua provided 140 million euros

to complete the construction of an isocyanate plant.

In exchange, Wanhua received a 38 percent stake in First Chemical,

the holding company for BorsodChem,

and an option to buy the remaining shares within the next 24 months.

Wolfgang Büchele, the chief executive of BorsodChem, said that

without Wanhua, the company would have found it difficult to grow.

“We become a member of a group with a global view

compared to BorsodChem, which is a regional player,” Mr. Büchele said.

Chinese companies and the Chinese authorities are shopping around in other countries in the region.

Last year, China signed a memorandum of understanding

to lend $1 billion to Moldova, one of the poorest countries in Europe.

China’s central bank agreed last year to a three-year currency swap of $2.3 billion to Belarus.

Ma Changlin, economic and trade counselor at the Chinese embassy in Warsaw, said

China “is interested in using the region as a springboard to the rest of the European Union.”

Countries like Hungary, eager for the business

even before the global financial crisis sent the economy into a tailspin,

have gone to great lengths to make them feel welcome.

The bilingual school is close to the Asia Center,

a huge new shopping mall and business park catering to the needs of the growing Chinese community,

which local officials estimate at several thousand people.

Strabag, the giant European construction company, invested 200 million euros in the complex,

which covers 1.35 million square feet.

It opened in 2003 and now has more than 500 showrooms representing a dozen Asian countries.

A walk though the sparkling clean building reveals a variety of products on display,

including textiles, electronics, jewelry, furniture, crafts and accessories.

Nearby is a Trade Promotion Center to advance contacts between Western and Asian companies.

In Poland, by contrast, government and business are less engaged in reaching out to Chinese investors, Mr. Ma said.

“There is no strategic vision for investment,”

he said in a recent speech to the Polish Information and Foreign Investment Agency.

He cited a lack of knowledge on both sides, as well as cultural differences

and, on top of everything, the language barrier.

That is something the Hungarians are trying to overcome.

At the Hungarian-Chinese school, Eszter Felfoldi, 9, said

she had already decided what she wanted to do when she finished her studies.

“I want to be an interpreter,” she said in this article from the New York Times.

“When I am taken to a Chinese restaurant, I already can ask for some of the dishes in Chinese.”

 

David Caploe PhD

Editor-in-Chief

EconomyWatch.com

President / acalaha.com

 

About David Caploe PRO INVESTOR

Honors AB in Social Theory from Harvard and a PhD in International Political Economy from Princeton.