Tough talk but no action as row over alleged Chinese spy exposes UK weakness
james cleverly
Foreign Secretary James Cleverly recently visited China to patch up strained relations between Beijing and the UK - Rory Arnold/No10 Downing Street/2023 Crown Copyright

A fortnight ago, James Cleverly was gladhanding Chinese officials on a mission to patch up strained relations with Beijing.

“It is an important country, it’s a large country, an influential country and a complicated country,” the Foreign Secretary told journalists, “and therefore our relationship with China will necessarily be just as complicated and sophisticated.”

Just 10 days later, things are even more complicated.

The revelation that a parliamentary researcher had been arrested on suspicion of spying for China has sent shockwaves through Westminster and prompted calls for the world’s second-biggest economy to be labelled a security threat.

It prompted Rishi Sunak to warn Li Qiang, the Chinese premier, that foreign interference in British democracy “will never be tolerated” during an awkward meeting on the sidelines of the G20 conference in India.

Beijing has dismissed the episode as “nothing but malicious slander”.

Yet while the Prime Minister has confronted Chinese officials, ministers have resisted taking a tougher stance. The Government is reluctant to go beyond tough words for fear of angering Beijing and provoking a potentially economically painful backlash.

The deep economic ties between Britain and China mean the UK can ill-afford to risk Beijing imposing punitive tariffs or restrictions, as it has done in the recent past with Australia.

Furthermore, Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch has admitted that Britain cannot hit its net zero targets without Chinese batteries.

“For a lot of our companies, they will source a fair amount of their components from China,” says Mark Swift, of Make UK, which represents UK manufacturers.

“So if you turned off that tap overnight, it would clearly have a big impact.”

Trade between Britain and China totalled £107.5bn in the year to the end of March, according to figures published by the Department for Business and Trade.

China is the dominant partner, exporting just over £30bn more to Britain than it imports from us. China has become the workshop to the world since the turn of the century, supplying a huge range of goods and parts.

Overall, China is the UK’s fourth-largest trading partner and accounts for 6.1pc of UK trade. British businesses source large amounts of telecoms equipment, office supplies, clothing and cars from the country.

The numbers can mask strong dependencies in specific areas. Swift points out that around 40pc of the UK’s semiconductors are imported from China, while British manufacturers also rely on Chinese steel.

A report by the Independent Business Network found that in 2019 around 52,000 products imported to the UK came almost exclusively from China. They ranged from mercuric batteries used in hearing aids to aniline salt used in the manufacture of dyes.