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China Trade Offsets Brazil's Export Losses To The United States
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) When Washington slapped steep new duties on Brazilian exports in August, the headline risk was clear: a sudden hit to trade with the United States, still Brazil's second-largest customer.
Between August and October, sales to the US dropped from 10.2 billion dollars to 7.7 billion, as tariffs on key products climbed to around 50 percent.
Yet the feared collapse never came. Over the same three months, Brazil's exports to China jumped 25.7 percent, reaching 27.1 billion dollars.
That extra 5.6 billion more than covered the loss in the US market, turning Beijing into the shock absorber for an abrupt, politically driven tariff shock.
The adjustment has been brutally pragmatic. Brazilian exporters redirected soybeans, beef and crude oil at record speed: those three products alone added 5.1 billion dollars in new sales to China.
Without the Chinese demand, Brazil's total exports in the period would have been almost flat. With it, shipments to the world excluding the US rose by double digits.
Other markets helped too. Mexico, Chile, the Philippines and Russia took more Brazilian beef. Japan and the Netherlands bought more coffee.
Spain, Colombia and the United Arab Emirates increased purchases of wood and related products.
China Trade Offsets Brazil's Export Losses To The United States
In sector after sector, basic commodities at the start of the production chain found new buyers; more processed goods had a harder time.
This nimble response says a lot about the country's private sector. Faced with higher costs and political noise, producers and traders moved fast instead of waiting for subsidies or grand speeches.
But it also exposes a growing vulnerability: nearly a third of everything Brazil sells abroad now goes to a single partner whose priorities can shift overnight.
For Brazil's next decade, the real question is not whether exporters can improvise under pressure-they clearly can.
It is whether policymakers will use this breathing space to deepen trade diversification and competitiveness, or slide further into comfortable dependence on one giant customer and the politics that come with it.
Between August and October, sales to the US dropped from 10.2 billion dollars to 7.7 billion, as tariffs on key products climbed to around 50 percent.
Yet the feared collapse never came. Over the same three months, Brazil's exports to China jumped 25.7 percent, reaching 27.1 billion dollars.
That extra 5.6 billion more than covered the loss in the US market, turning Beijing into the shock absorber for an abrupt, politically driven tariff shock.
The adjustment has been brutally pragmatic. Brazilian exporters redirected soybeans, beef and crude oil at record speed: those three products alone added 5.1 billion dollars in new sales to China.
Without the Chinese demand, Brazil's total exports in the period would have been almost flat. With it, shipments to the world excluding the US rose by double digits.
Other markets helped too. Mexico, Chile, the Philippines and Russia took more Brazilian beef. Japan and the Netherlands bought more coffee.
Spain, Colombia and the United Arab Emirates increased purchases of wood and related products.
China Trade Offsets Brazil's Export Losses To The United States
In sector after sector, basic commodities at the start of the production chain found new buyers; more processed goods had a harder time.
This nimble response says a lot about the country's private sector. Faced with higher costs and political noise, producers and traders moved fast instead of waiting for subsidies or grand speeches.
But it also exposes a growing vulnerability: nearly a third of everything Brazil sells abroad now goes to a single partner whose priorities can shift overnight.
For Brazil's next decade, the real question is not whether exporters can improvise under pressure-they clearly can.
It is whether policymakers will use this breathing space to deepen trade diversification and competitiveness, or slide further into comfortable dependence on one giant customer and the politics that come with it.
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