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Global subsidies rebound, especially in China, OECD says

Global subsidies rebound, especially in China, OECD says

ReutersMon, June 1, 2026 at 10:57 AM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: A Chinese delegation arrives at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) headquarters for trade talks with a U.S. delegation, in Paris, France, March 15, 2026. REUTERS/Abdul Saboor/File Photo

PARIS, June 1 (Reuters) - Government subsidies to industry have reached their highest level since the global financial crisis, ‌driven largely by China, a report from the Organisation ‌for Economic Cooperation and Development said on Monday.

• The OECD's Manufacturing Groups ​and Industrial Corporations database, known by the acronym MAGIC, tracks what firms receive as opposed to what governments say they give

• This provides an insight into opaque subsidy systems, particularly in China

• ‌Subsidies for 15 industries ⁠covered by the OECD's database reached $108 billion in 2024, only slightly below a peak in 2023

• ⁠As a percentage of firms' revenue, the amount in both years was the highest since western governments provided various forms of ​state support ​in 2009 at the height ​of the financial crisis

• The ‌sectors subsidised the most over 2005 to 2024 were solar panels, semiconductors, aluminium, steel and shipbuilding

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• The OECD said at a conservative estimate Chinese firms received on average three to eight times more government support than firms based in the OECD ‌between 2005 and 2024

• OECD Secretary-General ​Mathias Cormann told a press conference ​that of firms that ​gained market share between 2005 and 2024, subsidies ‌explained around 22% of the ​gains

• That rises ​to nearly 60% for Chinese firms

• Subsidies have not led to meaningful gains in productivity or profitability, he said

• ​Officials meeting at ‌an OECD ministerial gathering on Wednesday and Thursday will ​discuss ways to make global trade fairer

(Reporting by Leigh ​Thomas; editing by Barbara Lewis)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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