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China Strengthens links with Latin America

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China Strengthens links with Latin America

China, now the world's second-largest economy with a strong need for resources, is strengthening relations with Latin American countries, but this has not been without roadblocks.

China will displace the European Union as the region's second-largest trading partner by the middle of 2011, according to a report by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), released in May. Latin American countries are exploring cooperative arrangements with China in the fields of mining, energy, agriculture, infrastructure and science and technology, the report said.

In recent years, China has diversified its investment in Latin America from natural resources to manufacturing and the services industry, according to a July report by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' Institute of Latin American Studies.

China's interest in Latin America ranges from oil from Venezuela to timber from Guyana and soybeans from Brazil.

Zhang Sengen, executive director of the Institute of Chinese International Economic Relations, said Latin America has a dual appeal for China: it has abundant resources, which are needed to fuel China's future growth, and it is a huge market for Chinese products - with 560 million consumers and a combined gross domestic product of US$4 trillion.

"Latin America is a very attractive spot for Chinese investment," Zhang said.

China's foreign direct investment in Latin America reached $24.8 billion in 2008, making up 14.6% of China's total foreign direct investment, according to figures from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce. Meanwhile, Latin American investment in China hit $112.6 billion, roughly 14% of the total foreign capital China absorbed.

Exports from Latin American countries to China are expected to reach 19.3% of the total by 2020, up from 7.6% in 2009, according to the ECLAC report.

China has prided itself on what it calls a "win-win" relationship with Latin America, in which the region sells China raw materials, such as copper, iron and oil, while Latin American countries receive goods from China, including mobile phones and cars.

But relations have not been altogether smooth. Across the region, a growing wariness about trade with China has also been emerging.

In Brazil and Argentina, manufacturers have accused China of dumping products in their markets, prompting new tariffs on some Chinese importers. Other countries worry about China's aggressive efforts to win access to energy reserves.

In Peru, a state-owned Chinese company has faced a nearly two-decade long revolt from mine workers, featuring repeated strikes, clashes with police and arson attacks, The New York Times reported earlier in August. Disputes at the mine, founded in 1992 by steelmaker Shougang Corp, focus on wages, environmental damage and the company's treatment of local residents.

Wang Peng, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' Institute of Latin American Studies, said Chinese companies in Latin America need to do proper risk assessment and better protect the local environment. "There are more NGOs in other countries than in China, and many of them focus on environmental protection," Wang told Inter Press Service. "If our companies violate local environmental laws, no wonder tension happens."

Despite the problems, relations continue to develop. In April, Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Brazil, Venezuela and Chile, a moved that was heralded in China's state media as a significant step in cementing relations with Latin America.

"China and Latin American countries, all as developing countries, share extensive common interest. China has always attached great importance to its relations with these countries," Vice Foreign Minister Li Jinzhang said at a press conference in April, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency.

During the meetings, Brazil and China signed a joint action plan for 2010 to 2014 and reached agreements in the fields of culture, energy, finance, science and technology and product quality inspection, according to Xinhua.

China is Brazil's largest trading partner and biggest export market. Trade with Chile, China's second-largest trading partner in the region, reached $17.7 billion in 2009.

Oil-rich Venezuela is China's fifth-largest trading partner in Latin America with a trade volume of $7.15 billion in 2009. In March that year, Su Zhenxing, director of the CAAS's Institute of Latin American Studies, told Beijing Business Today that Latin America will become a leading strategic provider of crude oil.

Jiang Shixue, vice president of the Chinese Association of Latin American Studies and deputy director-general of the Chinese Center for the Third World Studies, said China's interest in Latin America is not just economic, but also political.

Of the 23 countries in the world that have diplomatic relations with Taiwan, 12 are in Latin America. China can gain leverage over these countries though investment incentives, Jiang said.

Asia Times Online :: China News, China Business News, Taiwan and Hong Kong News and Business.
 
Oh crap, Obama its losing right in our BackYard.....:hitwall:

Obama can do nothing but read his transcript. Right term would be CIA, freemason's, caucasus's are loosing right in our backyard. But hardly loosing.
 
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South America was lost by the USA a long time ago, China has never committed a act of war against any South American country.
 
This is a good first step for China. Nations like Venezuela are oil rich or rich in other resources and could help sustain China's economic growths. South American nations fearing arms sanctions from Western nations could become customers of Chinese arms. There is also a rapidly growing Hispanic population in the U.S. and if China builds a better image in Mexico, we may see improving Sino-American relations in the next few decades.
 
Guys, Latin America isn't South America. They're not interchangeable.
 
Wonder how the US will counter this. Latin America don't have too good of a opinion of US.
 
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