EU targets Chinese imports amid trade talks
Every day, around 16 million small, low-value packages arrive in the EU , 91% of which come from China . Many of those parcels contain items that European shoppers order from cheap Chinese online shop
Every day, around 16 million small, low-value packages arrive in the EU , 91% of which come from China . Many of those parcels contain items that Euro
Read Full Story at DW World →Why This Matters
The EU’s scrutiny of Chinese imports reflects a deeper reckoning with the unintended consequences of globalization in the digital age. As cross-border e-commerce surges, the bloc must balance its commitment to free trade with the need to protect domestic industries and enforce fair competition—without triggering a protectionist spiral that could destabilize supply chains.
Background Context
Since China’s accession to the WTO in 2001, its dominance in low-cost manufacturing has reshaped global trade, but the rise of ultra-fast, ultra-cheap online retail has exposed regulatory gaps. The EU’s customs systems were designed for bulk shipments, not the 16 million daily parcels overwhelming its ports—a challenge that has only grown as platforms like Shein and Temu turn China into the de facto warehouse of Europe.
What Happens Next
Expect tougher customs enforcement, potential tariff hikes on low-value shipments, or even new quotas for Chinese e-commerce goods. The EU may also push for stricter origin-labeling rules or digital trade agreements to close loopholes. Meanwhile, Beijing’s response could escalate from tit-for-tat tariffs to broader trade retaliation, testing the bloc’s resolve to decouple selectively.
Bigger Picture
This dispute is a microcosm of a broader shift: the end of the era where globalization meant frictionless trade. As countries weaponize supply chains and digital platforms blur traditional trade boundaries, the EU is grappling with how to defend its single market without betraying its free-trade principles—or ceding ground to protectionist blocs like the U.S. and China.


