SOURCE / ECONOMY
China’s manufacturing sector enters second tier globally, on par with Germany and Japan: report
Published: Dec 30, 2025 03:54 PM
A view of an auto manufacturing line in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu Province, on May 13, 2025. Photo: VCG

A view of an auto manufacturing line in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu Province, on May 13, 2025. Photo: VCG


China's manufacturing sector advanced steadily under pressure, moving toward innovation and higher quality in 2024. Its manufacturing power index has reached the same range as Germany and Japan, placing China in the second tier of global manufacturing powers and making it the fourth country — after the US, Germany, and Japan — to enter the ranks of global manufacturing powers, according to the 2025 China Manufacturing Power Development Index Report released in Beijing on Tuesday.

The report is jointly compiled by the strategic consulting center of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, the China Academy of Machinery Science and Technology Group Co, and the National Industrial Information Security Development Research Center. Continuously released since 2015, it has become an important indicator for objectively assessing the overall level of China's manufacturing industry.

Based on data analysis, the report summarizes the main characteristics of China's manufacturing development in 2024, including a clear rise in innovation-driven growth, sustained positive momentum in quality and efficiency, and a rebound in the share of manufacturing exports in global exports.

These findings show that, while steadily consolidating its position as the world's largest manufacturing country, China has made solid progress in promoting high-quality manufacturing development and achieved positive results, according to the report.

Also on Tuesday, the Green Paper on Technological Innovation in Key Sectors of China's Manufacturing Industry - Technology Roadmap 2025 was released, highlighting the main progress and development directions across 17 key sectors and 35 priority development areas in China.

By 2030, seven industries, including information and communications equipment, shipbuilding and marine engineering equipment, and household appliances, are expected to continue to maintain world-leading positions and achieve breakthroughs in original innovation, according to the paper.

By 2035, six industries, such as new display equipment, robotics, and energy storage equipment, are expected to enter the ranks of world leaders.

Meanwhile, other science- and technology-intensive manufacturing fields, including aerospace equipment, integrated circuits, and new materials, are also expected to overall move into the world's advanced tier, the paper said.

Global Times