Investment in Australia by Chinese businesses crashed by almost 70 per cent last year to the lowest level since 2007, a report released today showed.
Trade disputes between Canberra and Beijing, restrictions on money exiting China and stricter laws on foreign capital in Australia have forced Chinese investors to look at other destinations. Wine Australia said it made the decision after consulting Australian grape growers and wine makers, the Bloomberg news agency reports.
China - traditionally the biggest market for Australian wine growers - slapped a 220 per cent tariff on exports in 2020.
Why they want to invest their money in a hostile country that made the war clamor.
Our Australia has a very bad reputation for abiding by the contract. Turnbull slams ‘deceitful’ Morrison for giving Australia a reputation as untrustworthy