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After Washington's Tariff“Relief”, Nearly Half Of Brazil's U.S. Exports Still Punished
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) On the surface, Washington just threw Brazil a lifeline. The White House lifted extra tariffs on a bundle of headline farm goods, and Brazilian officials rushed to welcome the decision.
Look closer, though, and the“relief” is far more limited than it sounds. Even after the change, roughly 41% of everything Brazil sells to the United States in 2024 still pays a 50% punitive tariff.
That is about $16.1 billion in exports. The average tax on Brazilian products has dropped from 33% to 27.7%, but that is still miles above the roughly 2.2% that applied before the current U.S. administration turned a political grievance into a trade weapon.
The winners of the new deal are clear. Green coffee, beef, bovine offal, citrus essential oils and mango products – together worth just over $4 billion this year – regain something close to fair competition in the U.S. market.
For farmers, traders and logistics hubs tied to agribusiness, this is the difference between holding on to contracts and watching orders quietly shift to rival suppliers.
The real damage now sits in the shadows of the farm headlines. High-value industrial and processed exports remain trapped behind the 50% wall: semi-finished steel and aluminum, loaders and graders, large electrical transformers, plywood, granite, pine moldings, cured tobacco and more.
U.S.–Brazil trade tension hits sugar hard
Raw sugar for fuel and food faces effective tariffs above 100%. Brazilian business groups estimate that, if such penalties became broad and lasting, they could erase around R$175 bilhões ($32 bilhões) in GDP and more than 1.3 million jobs, with a heavy impact on industrial states.
For expats and foreign readers, this is not an abstract quarrel. It helps explain why coffee, sugar and beef prices feel jumpy; why U.S.–Brazil relations are tense even when leaders smile for cameras; and why Brazilian companies are quietly redirecting cargoes to Europe and Asia, often at thinner margins.
Behind the numbers is a bigger story: when politics overrides predictable rules, open trade shrinks, supply chains bend, and countries start planning a future where they rely less on the U.S. market and the dollar – whether Washington likes it or not.
Look closer, though, and the“relief” is far more limited than it sounds. Even after the change, roughly 41% of everything Brazil sells to the United States in 2024 still pays a 50% punitive tariff.
That is about $16.1 billion in exports. The average tax on Brazilian products has dropped from 33% to 27.7%, but that is still miles above the roughly 2.2% that applied before the current U.S. administration turned a political grievance into a trade weapon.
The winners of the new deal are clear. Green coffee, beef, bovine offal, citrus essential oils and mango products – together worth just over $4 billion this year – regain something close to fair competition in the U.S. market.
For farmers, traders and logistics hubs tied to agribusiness, this is the difference between holding on to contracts and watching orders quietly shift to rival suppliers.
The real damage now sits in the shadows of the farm headlines. High-value industrial and processed exports remain trapped behind the 50% wall: semi-finished steel and aluminum, loaders and graders, large electrical transformers, plywood, granite, pine moldings, cured tobacco and more.
U.S.–Brazil trade tension hits sugar hard
Raw sugar for fuel and food faces effective tariffs above 100%. Brazilian business groups estimate that, if such penalties became broad and lasting, they could erase around R$175 bilhões ($32 bilhões) in GDP and more than 1.3 million jobs, with a heavy impact on industrial states.
For expats and foreign readers, this is not an abstract quarrel. It helps explain why coffee, sugar and beef prices feel jumpy; why U.S.–Brazil relations are tense even when leaders smile for cameras; and why Brazilian companies are quietly redirecting cargoes to Europe and Asia, often at thinner margins.
Behind the numbers is a bigger story: when politics overrides predictable rules, open trade shrinks, supply chains bend, and countries start planning a future where they rely less on the U.S. market and the dollar – whether Washington likes it or not.
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