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China is becoming more popular than the U.S. in many Latin American countries

beijingwalker

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China is becoming more popular than the U.S. in many Latin American countries
BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER

APRIL 24, 2019 04:40 PM

The Trump administration has embarked on a major public relations offensive to counter China’s growing influence in Latin America. But, so far, the U.S. effort is failing miserably.

Earlier this week, a new survey by the CADEM polling firm in Chile - one of the closest U.S. allies in Latin America - showed that 77 percent of Chileans have a positive image of China, whereas only 61 percent have a positive image of the United States.

The same is happening in several other Latin American countries. In Mexico, 57 percent of those polled have a favorable view of China, compared with 43 percent who have a favorable view of the United States, according to a 2018 Latinobarómetro poll.

In Argentina, 51 percent see China favorably, compared with 45 percent who view the United States that way. In Peru, China wins the public opinion race by 59 to 56 percent. In Venezuela, China is ahead by 63 percent to 62 percent, the Latinobarómetro survey shows.

Granted, several other countries in the region, including Brazil, Colombia, and most Central American countries, still like the United States better. But public support for the United States in the region is falling, after years of growing Latin American trade ties with China.

China’s trade with Latin America has soared from $17 billion in 2002 to $306 billion last year, and China has already become the top trading partner of Brazil, Chile, Peru and Uruguay.

Alarmed by all of this, the Trump administration has begun to publicly ask Latin American countries to distance themselves from the Beijing regime. During a trip to the region in October, 2018, U.S. vice president Mike Pence had lashed out against China’s “predatory economic activity” in Latin America.

Similarly, during a tour of Latin American countries earlier this month, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that China “injects corrosive capital into the economic bloodstream, giving life to corruption and eroding good governance” in Latin America.

U.S. officials say that China spurs corruption in the region, because Chinese companies are not subject to strong anti-bribery laws. U.S. officials also say that Chinese firms are hurting Latin America by investing almost exclusively in extracting and transporting raw materials, this deepening the region’s dependence on commodities. By comparison, U.S. investments tend to be in manufacturing and services, which generate better paid and more sophisticated jobs.

But most Latin American officials, while agreeing with the U.S. concerns about China, are not surprised by the decline of America’s popularity in the region. The reason is simple, and it’s called Donald Trump, they say.

Indeed, the U.S. image in Latin America - and around the world - has taken a major hit since Trump took office, according to a separate Pew Research Center poll.

In Latin America, Trump’s crusade to build a border wall, his bizarre claims that most Mexican undocumented immigrants are “criminals” and “rapists,” and his claim that several Latin American nations are “shithole countries” have badly damaged the U.S. image.

Furthermore, Trump’s withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement and his calls for cutting foreign aid to Central America have further advanced the impression that the United States is a selfish power, and a bad neighbor.

Meantime, much of what China has to do to gain influence in the region is to remain relatively quiet, and be visible. China’s leader Xi Jin Ping has already visited the region four times since he took office in 2013.

Trump has made only one trip to the region, for a G-20 meeting of the world’s biggest economies in Argentina. Except for his valid criticism of Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba, most of Trump’s Latin America policy has been marked by hostility.

If Trump really wants to revert the trend of China’s rising popularity in Latin America, he should stop behaving like an arrogant neighborhood bully. He should start building a positive agenda with the region, instead of one based on anti-immigration, anti-trade, and anti-foreign aid tirades.

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/andres-oppenheimer/article229621934.html
 
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I think the question should be why are you only 1% higher than the country that is hated. Don't you think you should be 30% higher or something...
Why? we didn't do anything there, I m pretty surprised that why China enjoys a higher popularity in Venezuela, a country US has been working so much on.
 
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LOL! That says a lot about the popularity of Maduro if we are at 62% with an embargo.

By saying "haha look at this one" you can't ignore the significant ground China is gaining in Latin America. The US needs to improve relations not burn bridges in this part of the world.

 
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We are not good at pulling all stops just to make people hate us.

you do not stand for anything except your pocketbooks. tomorrow if Venezuela has a Dear Kim as their ruler you would not mind supporting them for a few pennies
 
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LOL I am glad the US elected someone like Trump. I hope Trump gets re-elected. This man has destroyed the credibility and standing of his nation which was already beyond repair. China is reaping the rewards today and all developing nations around the world want to replicate her work ethic.

you do not stand for anything except your pocketbooks. tomorrow if Venezuela has a Dear Kim as their ruler you would not mind supporting them for a few pennies

LOL let me guess dear America loves the Venezuelan people just like it loved the Iraqis, Afghans and Syrians.
 
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you do not stand for anything except your pocketbooks. tomorrow if Venezuela has a Dear Kim as their ruler you would not mind supporting them for a few pennies
What is a pocketbook? China is the world first cashless country, we don't even carry cash. tomorrow if Venezuela has a Dear Kim as their ruler US would not mind supporting them for a few pennies, as long as “he might be a bastard, but he's our bastard”.
 
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What is a pocketbook? China is the world first cashless country, we don't even carry cash. tomorrow if Venezuela has a Dear Kim as their ruler US would not mind supporting them for a few pennies, as long as “he might be a bastard, but he's our bastard”.

none of the states supported by USA have a human rights record close to North Korea or China of the Cultural Revolution/Great Leap Forward

USA has dumped a lot of dictators when they are not worth the trouble. If you wonder why some of the PDFers are sore at America they got dumped too

LOL I am glad the US elected someone like Trump. I hope Trump gets re-elected. This man has destroyed the credibility and standing of his nation which was already beyond repair. China is reaping the rewards today and all developing nations around the world want to replicate her work ethic.

wish you good luck getting pakistanis to replicate chinese work ethic
 
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none of the states supported by USA have a human rights record close to North Korea or China of the Cultural Revolution/Great Leap Forward

USA has dumped a lot of dictators when they are not worth the trouble. If you wonder why some of the PDFers are sore at America they got dumped too



wish you good luck getting pakistanis to replicate chinese work ethic
US is the worst in human rights abuses not only in US only, but around the world by killing tens of millions by wars and bombings over decades. As for US itself, it was founded on stolen land by killing off tens of millions of native population , it used blacks as slaves and didn't treat them as humans, racial segregation had been practiced in centuries and the remnants are still clearly felt in today US, they put innocent Japanese immigrants into concentration camps and confiscated all their properties, the list goes on for ever..
 
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