-Caveat Lector-

WASHINGTON POST
November 20, 2004
China Widens Economic Role in Latin America
By LARRY ROHTER

ANTIAGO, Chile, Nov. 19 - The expected arrival here on Friday of President
Bush, who personifies for Latin Americans the economic and political power
of Washington, is being greeted with an uneasy mix of protests and hopes for
greater growth.
But while the United States may still regard the region as its backyard, its
dominance is no longer unquestioned. Suddenly, the presence of China can be
felt everywhere, from the backwaters of the Amazon to mining camps in the
Andes.

Driven by one the largest and most sustained economic expansions in history,
and facing bottlenecks and shortages in Asia, China is increasingly turning
to South America as a supplier. It is busy buying huge quantities of iron
ore, bauxite, soybeans, timber, zinc and manganese in Brazil. It is vying
for tin in Bolivia, oil in Venezuela and copper here in Chile, where last
month it displaced the United States as the leading market for Chilean
exports.

While President Bush is spending the weekend here for the Asian-Pacific
Economic Cooperation forum, President Hu Jintao of China is here in the
midst of a two-week visit to Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Cuba. In the
course of it, he has announced more than $30 billion in new investments and
signed long-term contracts that will guarantee China supplies of the vital
materials it needs for its factories.

The United States, preoccupied with the worsening situation in Iraq, seems
to have attached little importance to China's rising profile in the region.
If anything, increased trade between Latin America and China has been
welcomed as a means to reduce pressure on the United States to underwrite
economic reforms, with geopolitical considerations pushed to the background.

"On the diplomatic side, the Chinese are quietly but persistently and
effectively operating just under the U.S. radar screen," said Richard
Feinberg, who was the chief Latin America adviser at the National Security
Council during the Clinton administration. "South America is obviously
drifting, and diplomatic flirtations with China would tend to underscore the
potential for divergences with Washington."

Chinese investment and purchases are seen as vital for economies short on
capital and struggling to emerge from a long slump. In Argentina earlier
this week, for example, Mr. Hu announced nearly $20 billion in new
investment in railways, oil and gas exploration, construction and
communications satellites, a huge boost for a country whose economic
vitality has been sapped since a financial collapse in December 2001.

China is also increasingly willing to venture outside the economic realm. In
March, for example, after Dominica, in the Caribbean, severed diplomatic
relations with Taiwan, Beijing responded with a $112 million aid package,
which includes $6 million in budget support this year and $1 million
annually for six years. In Antigua, it has pledged $23 million toward the
construction of a new soccer stadium.
Political relations seem to be advancing most rapidly with Brazil, Latin
America's most populous nation, where the left-leaning government has
repeatedly floated the idea of a "strategic alliance" with Beijing.
The Brazilian government has made clear that it views closer ties with China
as a card that can be played to offset American influence and trade
dominance. While not suggesting that China could soon replace the United
States as Brazil's main customer and partner, the aim is to force trade and
other concessions from the United States and rich industrialized nations.
"We want a partnership that integrates our economies and serves as a
paradigm for South-South cooperation," President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
said in May during a state visit to China during which he was accompanied by
nearly 500 Brazilian business executives. "We are two giants without
historical, political or economic divergences, free to think only about the
future."
Before his visit, Mr. da Silva even hinted at negotiating a free-trade
agreement with China, a step that Chile this week announced it would take.
But China's impact in Brazil is already felt so strongly that the idea was
quickly shelved after São Paulo business groups expressed fears of being
overwhelmed by state-owned Chinese companies in their own domestic market.
In 2003 China became Brazil's second-largest individual trading partner, and
in recent months the Chinese have been seeking joint ventures that would
expand trade even further and give them a significant investment stake.
Brazil is one of the few countries to enjoy a trade surplus with China, and
last year alone exports to China nearly doubled, to $4.5 billion.
"Over the past three or four years, the growth in trade has been explosive,"
said Renato Amorim, formerly a diplomat in Brazil's embassy in Beijing and
now the executive director of the Brazil-China Business Council. "China is
trying to assure reliable sources of supply of raw materials to deal with
the shortages it faces, and since there are no conflicts on the political
agenda, Brazil fits the bill."
Many of the minerals come from a part of the Amazon known as Carajas, which
has the largest, purest reserves of iron ore and other strategic minerals in
the world. At a complex at the mouth of the Amazon near Belém that produces
alumina, the white powder that is refined from bauxite to make aluminum,
production may soon double, with most of it expected to go to China over the
next decade.
Farther down the coast, Baosteel of China and Companhia Vale do Rio Doce of
Brazil, the world's largest iron ore producer, are partners in a $1.5
billion steel venture to produce up to eight million tons of iron a year.
Upriver in Manaus, Chinese delegations are negotiating long-term deals for
timber. To the south, in Mato Grosso, similar missions are trying to lock up
supplies of soybeans and cotton.
The same is happening elsewhere, especially in agriculture. All across the
South American heartland, from the Amazon to the pampas of Argentina, a boom
in the cultivation of soybeans, used mainly as animal feed, has been
propelled in recent years by the emergence half a world away of a Chinese
middle-class with more income and a desire for more pork, chicken and beef.
Concerned by what they see as Chinese advances, Japan and South Korea are
also stepping up their efforts to secure their own supplies of raw materials
in the region. Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan visited Brazil in
mid-September. President Roh Moo Hyun of South Korea has also scheduled
trips to Argentina, Brazil and Chile, planned around the Chinese visits.
"Within a few years there is likely to be a 'war' to develop raw materials,"
Park Yong Soo, president of the state-run Korea Resources Corporation, told
Reuters last month. "China is challenging aggressively," he added, leading
to supply shortages and higher prices.
The few Brazilian analysts who have experience dealing with China are also
urging their government to be cautious. Ideological sympathies or some vague
notion of third world solidarity, they say, should not get in the way of the
national interest.
In pursuit of their "strategic partnership," Brazil and China have jointly
developed a satellite program, are discussing Brazilian sales of uranium for
use in Chinese reactors, and recently marked the opening of a plant in China
owned by the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer.
But it is clear to most Brazilian experts that China sees their country
primarily as a source of raw materials, and that bothers them. Many are
encouraging the government to fight for a more equal relationship, raising
concerns from trade flows to environmental damage.
"Thus far, the discourse has been much more political that pragmatic, with
all this talk of a South-South alliance," said Eliana Cardoso, formerly a
World Bank economist for China and now a university professor in São Paulo.
She and others caution that though President da Silva has stressed that the
Brazilian and Chinese economies are essentially complementary, China is also
a rival.
During President Hu's visit last week, the Brazilian government agreed to
recognize China as a "market economy," a step that makes it harder to impose
penalties on China for dumping exports. The influential Industrial
Federation of São Paulo immediately criticized the move as a "political
decision" that leaves "Brazilian industry in a vulnerable position" and will
bring "prejudicial consequences to various industrial sectors."
Not only are businesses concerned about China's making inroads into the
domestic market; they also worry about exports of products with which Brazil
has had some success abroad, from shoes and toys to chemicals and car parts.
"What Brazil has to insist on is that instead of exporting raw materials, we
try to export processed goods," Dr. Cardoso said.
Marcos Jank, an economist who is an adviser to the Industrial Federation of
São Paulo, agreed. "China in the long term can rob markets from Brazil,
because the hand of the state is still very strong in a lot of areas,
including the exchange rate," he said. "It is a ferocious competitor in the
things we export, as well as for markets and investments."
In fact, so much foreign investment has been going to China that Latin
America is finding it difficult to obtain the capital it needs to finance
its own growth. As a result Brazil, like neighboring Argentina, has been
forced to court Citic, the state-controlled China International Trust and
Investment Corporation, in hopes that at least a small part of China's
estimated $500 billion in foreign reserves will make its way to the region.
Thus far, China has been mainly interested in infrastructure projects that
would assure a more steady flow of the products it is already buying from
Brazil and Argentina. In particular, railways, ports, highways, gas
pipelines and other energy-related projects are being studied. Earlier this
month, a Citic delegation visited two dam sites in the Amazon that would be
essential to the alumina and steel joint ventures in Brazil.
Such proje



November 20, 2004
China Widens Economic Role in Latin America
By LARRY ROHTER

ANTIAGO, Chile, Nov. 19 - The expected arrival here on Friday of President
Bush, who personifies for Latin Americans the economic and political power
of Washington, is being greeted with an uneasy mix of protests and hopes for
greater growth.
But while the United States may still regard the region as its backyard, its
dominance is no longer unquestioned. Suddenly, the presence of China can be
felt everywhere, from the backwaters of the Amazon to mining camps in the
Andes.
Driven by one the largest and most sustained economic expansions in history,
and facing bottlenecks and shortages in Asia, China is increasingly turning
to South America as a supplier. It is busy buying huge quantities of iron
ore, bauxite, soybeans, timber, zinc and manganese in Brazil. It is vying
for tin in Bolivia, oil in Venezuela and copper here in Chile, where last
month it displaced the United States as the leading market for Chilean
exports.
While President Bush is spending the weekend here for the Asian-Pacific
Economic Cooperation forum, President Hu Jintao of China is here in the
midst of a two-week visit to Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Cuba. In the
course of it, he has announced more than $30 billion in new investments and
signed long-term contracts that will guarantee China supplies of the vital
materials it needs for its factories.
The United States, preoccupied with the worsening situation in Iraq, seems
to have attached little importance to China's rising profile in the region.
If anything, increased trade between Latin America and China has been
welcomed as a means to reduce pressure on the United States to underwrite
economic reforms, with geopolitical considerations pushed to the background.
"On the diplomatic side, the Chinese are quietly but persistently and
effectively operating just under the U.S. radar screen," said Richard
Feinberg, who was the chief Latin America adviser at the National Security
Council during the Clinton administration. "South America is obviously
drifting, and diplomatic flirtations with China would tend to underscore the
potential for divergences with Washington."
Chinese investment and purchases are seen as vital for economies short on
capital and struggling to emerge from a long slump. In Argentina earlier
this week, for example, Mr. Hu announced nearly $20 billion in new
investment in railways, oil and gas exploration, construction and
communications satellites, a huge boost for a country whose economic
vitality has been sapped since a financial collapse in December 2001.
China is also increasingly willing to venture outside the economic realm. In
March, for example, after Dominica, in the Caribbean, severed diplomatic
relations with Taiwan, Beijing responded with a $112 million aid package,
which includes $6 million in budget support this year and $1 million
annually for six years. In Antigua, it has pledged $23 million toward the
construction of a new soccer stadium.
Political relations seem to be advancing most rapidly with Brazil, Latin
America's most populous nation, where the left-leaning government has
repeatedly floated the idea of a "strategic alliance" with Beijing.
The Brazilian government has made clear that it views closer ties with China
as a card that can be played to offset American influence and trade
dominance. While not suggesting that China could soon replace the United
States as Brazil's main customer and partner, the aim is to force trade and
other concessions from the United States and rich industrialized nations.
"We want a partnership that integrates our economies and serves as a
paradigm for South-South cooperation," President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
said in May during a state visit to China during which he was accompanied by
nearly 500 Brazilian business executives. "We are two giants without
historical, political or economic divergences, free to think only about the
future."
Before his visit, Mr. da Silva even hinted at negotiating a free-trade
agreement with China, a step that Chile this week announced it would take.
But China's impact in Brazil is already felt so strongly that the idea was
quickly shelved after São Paulo business groups expressed fears of being
overwhelmed by state-owned Chinese companies in their own domestic market.
In 2003 China became Brazil's second-largest individual trading partner, and
in recent months the Chinese have been seeking joint ventures that would
expand trade even further and give them a significant investment stake.
Brazil is one of the few countries to enjoy a trade surplus with China, and
last year alone exports to China nearly doubled, to $4.5 billion.
"Over the past three or four years, the growth in trade has been explosive,"
said Renato Amorim, formerly a diplomat in Brazil's embassy in Beijing and
now the executive director of the Brazil-China Business Council. "China is
trying to assure reliable sources of supply of raw materials to deal with
the shortages it faces, and since there are no conflicts on the political
agenda, Brazil fits the bill."
Many of the minerals come from a part of the Amazon known as Carajas, which
has the largest, purest reserves of iron ore and other strategic minerals in
the world. At a complex at the mouth of the Amazon near Belém that produces
alumina, the white powder that is refined from bauxite to make aluminum,
production may soon double, with most of it expected to go to China over the
next decade.
Farther down the coast, Baosteel of China and Companhia Vale do Rio Doce of
Brazil, the world's largest iron ore producer, are partners in a $1.5
billion steel venture to produce up to eight million tons of iron a year.
Upriver in Manaus, Chinese delegations are negotiating long-term deals for
timber. To the south, in Mato Grosso, similar missions are trying to lock up
supplies of soybeans and cotton.
The same is happening elsewhere, especially in agriculture. All across the
South American heartland, from the Amazon to the pampas of Argentina, a boom
in the cultivation of soybeans, used mainly as animal feed, has been
propelled in recent years by the emergence half a world away of a Chinese
middle-class with more income and a desire for more pork, chicken and beef.
Concerned by what they see as Chinese advances, Japan and South Korea are
also stepping up their efforts to secure their own supplies of raw materials
in the region. Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan visited Brazil in
mid-September. President Roh Moo Hyun of South Korea has also scheduled
trips to Argentina, Brazil and Chile, planned around the Chinese visits.
"Within a few years there is likely to be a 'war' to develop raw materials,"
Park Yong Soo, president of the state-run Korea Resources Corporation, told
Reuters last month. "China is challenging aggressively," he added, leading
to supply shortages and higher prices.
The few Brazilian analysts who have experience dealing with China are also
urging their government to be cautious. Ideological sympathies or some vague
notion of third world solidarity, they say, should not get in the way of the
national interest.
In pursuit of their "strategic partnership," Brazil and China have jointly
developed a satellite program, are discussing Brazilian sales of uranium for
use in Chinese reactors, and recently marked the opening of a plant in China
owned by the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer.
But it is clear to most Brazilian experts that China sees their country
primarily as a source of raw materials, and that bothers them. Many are
encouraging the government to fight for a more equal relationship, raising
concerns from trade flows to environmental damage.
"Thus far, the discourse has been much more political that pragmatic, with
all this talk of a South-South alliance," said Eliana Cardoso, formerly a
World Bank economist for China and now a university professor in São Paulo.
She and others caution that though President da Silva has stressed that the
Brazilian and Chinese economies are essentially complementary, China is also
a rival.
During President Hu's visit last week, the Brazilian government agreed to
recognize China as a "market economy," a step that makes it harder to impose
penalties on China for dumping exports. The influential Industrial
Federation of São Paulo immediately criticized the move as a "political
decision" that leaves "Brazilian industry in a vulnerable position" and will
bring "prejudicial consequences to various industrial sectors."
Not only are businesses concerned about China's making inroads into the
domestic market; they also worry about exports of products with which Brazil
has had some success abroad, from shoes and toys to chemicals and car parts.
"What Brazil has to insist on is that instead of exporting raw materials, we
try to export processed goods," Dr. Cardoso said.
Marcos Jank, an economist who is an adviser to the Industrial Federation of
São Paulo, agreed. "China in the long term can rob markets from Brazil,
because the hand of the state is still very strong in a lot of areas,
including the exchange rate," he said. "It is a ferocious competitor in the
things we export, as well as for markets and investments."
In fact, so much foreign investment has been going to China that Latin
America is finding it difficult to obtain the capital it needs to finance
its own growth. As a result Brazil, like neighboring Argentina, has been
forced to court Citic, the state-controlled China International Trust and
Investment Corporation, in hopes that at least a small part of China's
estimated $500 billion in foreign reserves will make its way to the region.
Thus far, China has been mainly interested in infrastructure projects that
would assure a more steady flow of the products it is already buying from
Brazil and Argentina. In particular, railways, ports, highways, gas
pipelines and other energy-related projects are being studied. Earlier this
month, a Citic delegation visited two dam sites in the Amazon that would be
essential to the alumina and steel joint ventures in Brazil.
Such projects have raised questions about the environment, especially in the
Amazon. Environmental groups here look at China's dismal record on projects
like the Three Gorges Dam and worry that the Chinese will be tempted to
export their problems to Brazil.
In fact, several of the projects being considered would be highly polluting,
while others would be energy-intensive and probably inflict damage to the
environment similar to what occurred at Three Gorges. Of special concern are
a pair of plants that would process coal in Brazil, partly for export back
to China.
"It would be sad if at the moment the Chinese are beginning to worry about
being green, we continue on the old path of not evaluating this criterion in
our commercial transactions," the columnist Washington Novaes wrote this
month in O Estado de São Paulo. Brazil must avoid falling into the trap of
being "a big supplier of commodities without compensation for the high
environmental and social costs" that accompany that role, he added.
Brazilian analysts agree that hard negotiations on this and a host of other
issues lie ahead. Though the relationship with China is inherently unequal,
they note, Brazil can get more of what it wants only if it avoids being
impetuous and is as hard-nosed and pragmatic as the Chinese themselves.
"They want Brazil to continue to be a big producer of commodities so as to
regulate prices, to depress them on world markets," said Gilberto Dupas,
director of the Institute of Advanced Studies at the University of São
Paulo. "For China, any alliance with Brazil is eminently pragmatic and
opportunistic, and much more tactical than strategic."


Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company | Home | Privacy Policy | Search | Corrections | RSS | Help | Back to Top cts have raised questions about the environment, especially in the Amazon. Environmental groups here look at China's dismal record on projects like the Three Gorges Dam and worry that the Chinese will be tempted to export their problems to Brazil. In fact, several of the projects being considered would be highly polluting, while others would be energy-intensive and probably inflict damage to the environment similar to what occurred at Three Gorges. Of special concern are a pair of plants that would process coal in Brazil, partly for export back to China. "It would be sad if at the moment the Chinese are beginning to worry about being green, we continue on the old path of not evaluating this criterion in our commercial transactions," the columnist Washington Novaes wrote this month in O Estado de São Paulo. Brazil must avoid falling into the trap of being "a big supplier of commodities without compensation for the high environmental and social costs" that accompany that role, he added. Brazilian analysts agree that hard negotiations on this and a host of other issues lie ahead. Though the relationship with China is inherently unequal, they note, Brazil can get more of what it wants only if it avoids being impetuous and is as hard-nosed and pragmatic as the Chinese themselves. "They want Brazil to continue to be a big producer of commodities so as to regulate prices, to depress them on world markets," said Gilberto Dupas, director of the Institute of Advanced Studies at the University of São Paulo. "For China, any alliance with Brazil is eminently pragmatic and opportunistic, and much more tactical than strategic."


Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company | Home | Privacy Policy | Search | Corrections | RSS | Help | Back to Top

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