Highlights
- New Duke Kunshan University study reveals Chinese government entities hold ownership stakes in 94 of China's 100 largest mining companies, averaging 78% ownership, with many โprivateโ firms also featuring CCP governance structures.
- Chinese miners benefit from massive financial advantages, paying roughly 55% of borrowing costs faced by global competitors, while state control extends across financing, governance, and overseas reserves reporting.
- The research demonstrates China's critical mineral supply chainsโdominating rare earths, gallium, graphite, tungsten, and battery metalsโoperate as instruments of national strategy rather than free-market enterprises.
A new study by David Landry of Duke Kunshan University, published in Resources Policy, argues that Chinaโs mining sector is not merely influenced by the stateโit is structurally intertwined with it. Using datasets covering more than 5,000 Chinese mining firms plus interviews conducted in China and the Democratic Republic of Congo, Landry found that Chinese government entities hold ownership stakes in 94 of Chinaโs 100 largest mining companies, averaging 78% ownership, while many supposedly โprivateโ firms also feature Chinese Communist Party (CCP) governance structures guiding major decisions. For Rare Earth Exchangesโข readers, the paper reinforces a core reality of the Great Powers Era 2.0: Chinaโs mineral supply chains increasingly operate as instruments of national strategy, not purely free-market enterprises.
The Machinery Behind the Mineral Empire
The study examined three major channels of control: state ownership, subsidized financing, and CCP organizational influence inside corporations. Chinese miners reportedly pay roughly 55% of the borrowing costs faced by many global competitors, effectively receiving billions in indirect financial support. ย The implications are enormous. China dominates refining and processing for rare earths, gallium, graphite, tungsten, and many battery metals. If Beijing can simultaneously influence financing, governance, and overseas reserves reporting, then supply chains become geopolitical leverage.
Why This Matters for Investors
The study strengthens arguments that Western governments underestimated the strategic integration of Chinaโs mining ecosystem. But caution is warranted. Ownership does not always equate to direct operational control, and not every Chinese company acts as a mere arm of the state. Some critics may argue the paper risks overstating coordination within Chinaโs sprawling industrial system.
Still, the broader conclusion is difficult to dismiss: the line separating state policy and corporate behavior in Chinaโs critical mineral sector appears far thinner than in most Western economies.
Citation: Landry, D. Iron Grip or Invisible Hand? The Channels of Government Control on the Chinese Mining Sector. Resources Policy, Volume 117 (2026), 105939.
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