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How Chinese Companies Expand Globally Despite Headwinds
Spring 2025
|MIT Sloan Management Review
Understanding Chinese companies' place-based strategies for growth can be valuable to companies everywhere.

The phrase “chu hai” (“going overseas,” in Chinese) has become a rallying cry for many Chinese companies in the past few years. Faced with the sluggish rebound of China’s domestic consumer market following the COVID-19 pandemic, they have turned their sights to foreign markets in search of growth. Many Chinese business leaders are confident that their innovation capabilities can make them competitive in these markets, but unprecedented trade barriers and geopolitical tensions represent significant hurdles to their international ambitions.
To understand these difficulties and the strategies Chinese business leaders are using to overcome them, we interviewed 40 such leaders engaged in international business from early 2023 through early 2024. We learned that by reconceiving their approach to the notion of place, Chinese businesses are finding new ways to tackle the challenges of internationalization.
Chinese companies face a threefold challenge in expanding internationally. The first is rising trade tensions with the United States. The once globally dominant flow of trade between the U.S. and China has been curtailed by increased tariffs and export controls. This affects not just Chinese companies but any organization that relies on the U.S.-China trade route. Following the U.S. government's announcement of export restrictions on AI chips to China in October 2022, leading Chinese semiconductor companies incurred losses, but chip manufacturers like Nvidia and Broadcom also took immediate hits to their stock prices. The second Trump administration is likely to exacerbate the trade tensions.
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