
US firms cautious about investing in China amid rising tensions, AmCham says
American companies are growing increasingly wary of investing in China amid rising tensions between the world's two largest economies, despite Beijing's efforts to woo foreign investors, a US business group has warned.
Advertisement
'Our companies are concerned not only about the political risks between the two countries, but also about trade barriers and any uncertainties around investing in China,' said Michael Hart, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in China (AmCham China), at a launch event for the group's 2025 white paper on Friday.
The annual report, which assesses the operating environment for US businesses in China, found that strained US-China relations remained the top concern of AmCham China's members for the fifth consecutive year, with 63 per cent of respondents naming it as their biggest operational challenge.
Relations have only grown more fraught since AmCham China
conducted the survey of more than 350 US firms in late 2024, with the two powers locked in an escalating trade war that has seen
both sides raise tariffs on each other's goods by more than 120 per cent.
Hart said both Chinese and US commerce authorities had been collecting feedback from companies to assess the impact of the current tariffs, as he urged both governments to prioritise creating a stable policy environment for US-China economic relations going forward.
Advertisement
'It does look like both governments are looking carefully and don't want to stop trade overall,' he said.
'Anecdotally, companies are reporting that they're able to bring in some items without tariffs,' he added. 'We haven't seen an official announcement. We'll wait for that.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Why China's officials are braced for yet another round of inspections to check their work
Chinese officials already have to deal with a series of inspectors knocking on their doors to keep tabs on their activities, but now they will also have a new group of 'performance observers' looking over their shoulders to check that they are not wasting government funds. Local officials in China are often castigated for spending money on 'white elephants' , such as flashy construction projects, in the hope these will provide a quick fix for the local economy and win favour with their supervisors. But in recent years, as local government debts mounted, the central government has been trying to rein in such excesses, with President Xi Jinping saying officials should prioritise quality development over rapid growth. Several provinces have started pilot programmes in recent months, especially after the Communist Party gave its austerity campaign a further push in March in an effort to cut waste and improve administrative efficiency. Local officials already face a raft of inspections, covering areas such as party discipline, their conduct and the environmental impact of their work, but the emergence of the new performance observers may be the result of regional party bodies taking the initiative. Although the central government has called for wasteful spending to be eliminated nationwide, it has not issued a public decree calling for the new inspection teams.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
How a ‘Harvard International' could boost Hong Kong as an education hub
Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu has invited international students worried about finishing their courses at Harvard University in the US to continue their studies at one of Hong Kong's universities. Other universities in Malaysia and Japan have put forward similar suggestions. This comes as Hong Kong is considering how to make best use of the part of the Northern Metropolis reserved for universities to bolster its role as an education hub . That site is at the heart of our future technology research and development area, and within shouting distance of Shenzhen, China's engineering and manufacturing powerhouse. Lee's invitation is a bold step in the right direction, but I suggest we take the opportunity to go even further and advance the city's higher education profile. Hong Kong should reach out to Harvard and offer to make a site available for an additional campus in the city. The new facility could be called Harvard International and admit all the university's international students and a significant number of American students at any one time, perhaps on a revolving basis. The trigger for these suggestions is the Trump administration's extraordinary attack on the American institution, widely regarded as one of the best in the world. The university has had its research grants cancelled and was told its tax status would be reconsidered while its ability to admit international students remains uncertain. We don't need to consider the merits of these assaults, and we should note that many are still subject to legal challenges in the US. But the uncertainty they have created gives Hong Kong an opening.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong puts construction of 8,300 homes on hold in Fanling
Hong Kong's housing authorities have suspended a key public residential development in a northern town consisting of 8,300 homes due to the suspected high costs of building the flats on deep rock strata, according to a lawmaker. The suspension of the development, including its site formation and infrastructure works, in Fanling came to light on Sunday in a document the Housing Department and the Civil Engineering and Development Department submitted to the North District Council, a day before a meeting to discuss the matter on Monday. The Fanling Area 17 site, spanning about 5.47 hectares (13.5 acres) of both government and private land, is located to the east of Ling Shan Road and Jockey Club Road, south of Ma Sik Road and west of Fan Leng Lau Road. It currently houses the Fan Garden Police Driving and Traffic Training Centre. The document did not mention the exact reasons of the suspension but said: 'To align with the government's principle of maintaining sustainable public finances, the Housing Bureau has adjusted the development plan for the Fanling Area 17 public housing project after reviewing the cost-effectiveness of public housing initiatives over the next ten years.' Authorities said they had 'more flexibility to prioritise sites that are more suitable and cost-effective for construction' with sufficient land supply for public housing in the next decade. Lawmaker Edward Lau Kwok-fan, who is a member of the Legislative Council's housing panel, said the government's decision stemmed from geotechnical studies revealing unusually deep rock strata beneath the site, leading to significantly higher foundation costs.