http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=MTIxMzgyNjEz

Analysis
Young marriage is on the rocks
Published Date: February 10, 2011 
By Brian Winter and Brian Ellsworth 



At least once a week during her young presidency, Dilma Rousseff has met with 
trusted advisers to try to solve an intractable problem - China. Only a few 
months ago, Brazil and China seemed destined to enjoy one of the defining 
alliances of the early 21st century - two fast-growing emerging market 
economies seeking ever-greater opportunities for business together and standing 
side by side on key global issues such as trade negotiations. It's not quite 
working out that way.

Rousseff's regular meetings are just one sign of how she is steering Brazil 
toward a more confrontational stance with China. She is trying to address what 
she sees as an increasingly lopsided relationship while also bringing Brazil's 
strategic alliances in line with her dream of turning it into a middle-class 
country by the end of the decade. The core problem is a torrent of Chinese 
imports that has quintupled in size since 2005, with disastrous effects for 
Brazilian manufacturers and the well-paying, highly skilled jobs that Rousseff 
is so focused on creating.

While the weekly session of ministers and finance ministry officials is 
ostensibly about how to improve Brazil's competitiveness in global trade, "it's 
basically a China meeting," said one high-level official who takes part. 
"Relations between the two countries are not hostile," the official said. "But 
we are going to take measures to protect ourselves ... and push for a more 
equal relationship." In the short term, senior government sources say that will 
mean more targeted tariffs on manufactured goods coming from China and tighter 
supervision by customs officials, as well as more anti-dumping complaints 
against Beijing.

New restrictions on foreign mining companies are also likely, officials say, 
reflecting concerns that China wants to consolidate its grip on Brazil's 
commodities wealth while offering insufficient access to its own market. In a 
break from her predecessor, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Rousseff will push for a 
stronger yuan currency and more access to the Chinese market for Brazilian 
companies like airplane maker Embraer when she visits China in April. In the 
long run, Brazil and China are likely to retain relatively warm ties and 
continue to expand bilateral trade. Yet the shift evolving since Rousseff took 
office on Jan 1 could affect everything from Brazil's relationship with the 
United States to the future of so-called "south-south" ties among emerging 
market countries.

It's surprising that the relationship is changing so fast," said Mauricio 
Cardenas, director of the Latin America program at the Brookings Institution, a 
Washington think tank. "Brazil is clearly seeking major changes ... That could 
have consequences for all of Latin America as many other countries, who are 
experiencing the same problems (with China), follow the example of Brazil," 
Cardenas said.

Redefining a relationship with China is easier said than done. Just as the 
United States has struggled to balance its demands for a stronger yuan against 
its desire for cheap Chinese imports and financing, Brazil must also untangle a 
web of dependence that has grown rapidly in the last decade. Bilateral trade 
soared from just over $2 billion in 2000 to $56.2 billion in 2010. China has 
surpassed the United States as Brazil's main trading partner and was the 
biggest single source of foreign direct investment last year, at about $17 
billion.

The robust trade growth helped Brazil's economy expand last year at its fastest 
pace in two decades. It also means that any efforts by Rousseff to pass new 
protectionist measures may be fruitless, said Qiu Xiaoqi, China's ambassador to 
Brazil. "Trade between China and Brazil grew so fast because of a reciprocal 
need. When that need exists, nobody can get in the way," Qiu told Reuters in a 
rare interview. Qiu, who prides himself on his Brazilian cultural knowledge and 
insisted on conducting the interview in Portuguese, attributed anti-China 
rumblings to "a minority" of officials on Rousseff's team. He also pointed out 
that Brazil had a large trade surplus with China last year - about $5 billion.

A closer look, however, shows that it would have been a deficit if not for an 
extraordinary increase in the price of iron ore, which accounted for 40 percent 
of exports to China. Brazilian exports to China as measured by weight - thus, 
controlling for increases in commodities prices - fell 3 percent in 2010, while 
Chinese imports rose 89 percent. "Brazil has been naive in its management of 
the China relationship in recent years. It's far more uneven than most people 
think," said Fernando Henrique Cardoso, an opposition party leader who was 
president of Brazil from 1995-2003.

Despite Brazil's strong economic growth last year, its manufacturers are 
reeling. Industrial production has been flat or shrinking since April, and the 
damage in areas like textiles and shoes has been so severe that the National 
Industry Confederation, or CNI, has warned of "deindustrialization". The shift 
under Rousseff reflects her emphasis on nurturing local industries while Lula's 
trade policy was in part dictated by his dream of a grand alliance among 
developing nations.

Still, some who do business in both countries worry that China is being used as 
a scapegoat for Brazil's own problems. "Brazil's lack of competitiveness has 
nothing to do with the Chinese," said Charles Tang, president of the 
Brazil-China Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Rio de Janeiro. He attributed 
Brazil's problems to high taxes, labor costs and infrastructure bottlenecks 
that, along with an overvalued currency, make local goods comparatively 
expensive to produce. He also said that Brazilian companies, which for decades 
focused primarily on their own large domestic market, have missed several 
opportunities to do more business in China.

Soraya Rosar, a trade expert at the CNI, agrees but says Rousseff needs to push 
for greater access to China's market. Frustration with Chinese policies, 
especially over its slow appreciation of the yuan, has convinced Rousseff's 
team that Brazil must strengthen ties with the United States if it is to 
negotiate on anything approaching an equal footing with China. "Brazil alone 
will accomplish little," said one official close to Rousseff. "With the United 
States by our side, maybe they'll listen to us.

The US-Brazil relationship, which suffered under Lula, has changed rapidly 
under Rousseff. President Barack Obama will travel to Brazil in March, and 
China will be "a subject ripe for discussion" when Treasury Secretary Timothy 
Geithner visits, a source with knowledge of the talks said. Cardoso says 
Rousseff appears to be recasting Brazil's foreign policy with China as both a 
threat and an ally. "China for many years cleverly tried to frame the 
relationship as 'south-south' ... that its interest was the same as Brazil's 
interest. But China's not the south. China is China, with its own set of 
interests," Cardoso said.

Cardenas, of the Brookings Institution, says Brazil's policy shift could have 
profound implications if other countries follow its lead. "The Chinese were 
confident that they could count on the south-south relationship for support, 
but now they're seeing these voices of criticism are not just coming from the 
US," he said. "When your friends start to turn against you, maybe it's time to 
reexamine things." - Reuters

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