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Brazil, a Superpower in Agriculture, Flexes Muscle and Scares US PDF Print E-mail
2005 - January 2005
Written by Serena Parker   
Wednesday, 26 January 2005 12:38

Brazilian agricultureAlthough the United States is often described as the world’s lone superpower, former US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, described Brazil as “an agricultural superpower” during a visit last October. 

Farm sales abroad account for 40% of Brazil’s total exports, but what Brazil sends may surprise you. 

Long known for products such as sugar and coffee, Brazilian farmers have diversified the crops they grow.  Brazil is now the world’s largest exporter of beef, chickens, orange juice, sugar, coffee and tobacco. 

American farmers are beginning to take notice.  In the past six months, delegations from the American Farm Bureau and the National Farmers Union have traveled to Brazil to assess the competition.  Some American and European farmers are even choosing to buy land in Brazil and start producing there.

Ron Gaskill, director of Congressional Relations for International Trade at the American Farm Bureau in Washington, says Brazil’s temperate climate and vast tracts of unused, arable land make the country a very attractive place to set up production. 

According to Mr. Gaskill, American farmers see great opportunity in Brazil as well as certain competitive threats.

“I would say more than concerned that members of the American Farm Bureau and the agricultural community of the United States are interested in what’s going on in Brazil," he says. 

"Brazil has come onto the world scene as this new entity and it is flexing some muscle.  And unlike a lot of other developing nations Brazil has the muscle to flex.”

One way Brazil has flexed its muscle is by challenging U.S. and European Union farm subsidies, which they say hurt producers in developing countries. 

The World Trade Organization has ruled in favor of Brazil’s challenge to U.S. cotton subsidies and E.U. sugar subsidies, although both cases are on appeal. 

European and American farmers increasingly rely on government subsidies to compete with Brazil.  If the WTO rulings stand, Brazilian farmers are likely to make further gains. 

“I think if you look at present trends, it makes it very likely that Brazil will pass the United States as the largest food exporterl,” says G. Edward Schuh, director of the Center for International Economic Policy at the University of Minnesota. 

Mr. Schuh says there are several factors behind Brazil’s farm boom, including an overhaul of its basic economic policies and improvements in infrastructure.

“The third thing in the case of Brazil is that their investment in agricultural research – and it was very significant - has begun to pay off," he says. 

"And a lot of this increase in output that they’re getting is coming because they’ve learned how to use tropical soils.  This is the first country in the world that has learned how to use the tropical soils, which in Brazil’s case are called the cerrados.”
 
Brazil’s tropical savannah is larger than the American grain belt, but for years many thought the land was not suited to farming.  However, advances in agricultural research, including soil enrichment techniques, make it highly productive. 

Many of the new Brazilian farming techniques are the product of the Brazilian Enterprise for Agricultural and Livestock Research, or Embrapa. 

Pedro de Camargo, Brazil’s former Secretary of Agriculture Production and Trade, says Embrapa’s research has been invaluable.  He also credits the Brazilian government for taking other steps to improve farmers’ competitiveness.

“I think in the past 15 years Brazil corrected some major errors it used to make," he says.  "For example, we had an export tax.  So it made us less competitive.  No developed country has an export tax.  Brazil had one and eliminated it.”

According to Camargo, while Brazil has corrected a lot of structural errors, work remains to be done in strengthening the country’s infrastructure and reforming the tax system.

“We have a lot to be done on infrastructure.  We started, let’s say, with our ports.  We haven’t even started on roads," he says. 

"There is a lot to do.  We still have a tax structure that is very inefficient.  Our tax burden is high and inefficient.  We have to improve the way we tax our economy. 

"We still have extremely high interest rates, which is a burden on local production.  We have to improve our interest rates.  There are many points we can improve and I believe will improve in the future.”

American and European farmers are betting on that.

VOA



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Comments (11)Add Comment
I will believe it when I see it
written by Guest, January 26, 2005
This is one very rare case where good pressure from Brazil is being exerted. A socialist government pressuring the US to remove socialist farm subsidies: Pass me the smelling salts! I just wonder how this big agricultural dream squares with letting the Movimento Sem Terra run amock.
I\'ll agree this time
written by Guest, January 27, 2005
Socialist subsides you would expect from the EU, in fact, Brasil and the EU can't get past first base because of them. Same with the US, I wonder why a "conservative" free trader like Bush would continue to sign legislation that guarentees American farmers large profits for ineffecency. Brasil on the other hand has not stood still waiting, their large trading partners are in the East now, including Saudi Arabia and other "friendly" Arab countries, in fact Saudi Arabi is Brasil's largest customer for chicken and dairy products is Saudi Arabia...good for Brasil. With good roads and modern ports, Brasil will be come an agricultural powerhouse. The MST will be just a bump in the road.
OK, I\'m going to say it.
written by Guest, January 27, 2005
I know I am going to get hammered here, but agriculture is driving Brasil's exports, and exports are driving the improvement in the economy. As the writer points out, this expertise and efficency did not happen over night but over 15 years. Now, how long has Lula been President? This proves once again that Lula is riding the coat tails of his predesessor, Cardosa, and his team. It is also a fact, that Lula, in his leftest approach to land reform has a real good chance of screwing up 15 years of hard work by Brasilain scientists and farmers. We have to defeat this idiot in the next election, we are finally on the verge.
OK, I\'m going to say it.....Huh?
written by Guest, January 27, 2005
You are placing politics where doesn't fit. Brasil invested heavily in agricultural technonology (Embrapa), including satellite image processing technologies and bio-chemical research, from the late 60s.

That investement is now paying off by diversification. Lula is not taking credit for that, just like he is not taking credit for Brasilian nuclear, aviation, heavy equipment, etc etc etc.

These systems being in place for sometime now, and you are witnessing the outcome.....Pure and simple!
As the article stated
written by Guest, January 27, 2005
As the article stated what hampers brazil even in its ultracompetitive agriculture are taxes and and government inefiency ( this is redundant). Which just goes to prove that what really tears the farm owner and the farm hand apart in this nation is not unequal wealth but a government who hinders the creation of wealth while the pathetic MST goes along for the ride receiving state funds to set up their operation and european union funds to set up their new university which will defend farm subsidies as a concept. Hence an enemy base against the brazilian farmer IN BRAZIL.
Do not be surprised when this joke of an university grants an euro-idiot like jose bove and doctor honoris causis. I sugest the MSU ( movimento dos sem universidade) invades this MST university so those thieves finally get a taste of their own medicine.
Yes he is
written by Guest, January 27, 2005
Lula is taking complete credit for the improvement in the economy, as well as in the increase in exports. A result of maintaining the economic polices of the past. He is benefiting from the hard work, and savy of others, similar to President Clinton benefiting from a recovering economy when he took office. The problem is his administartion does not have the skills to really drive this growth to next level. As the author states, and the poster points out. High taxes, and the worlds highest interest rates can put a halt to this growth. The MST is a minor agrivation that will be a footnote after Lula's defeat.
Lula\'s defeat?
written by Guest, January 28, 2005
With Hugo Chavez as his advisor, Lula is guaranteed re-election whether Brazilian voters want it or not!
Lets keep Lula
written by Guest, February 01, 2005
Of course Lula is going to continue to do what is necessary for the growth of Brazil's agriculture. So will the oppsition, if elected. So would any president. the difference between different candidates today in on how to spend the national budget in the benefit of the people. Incresing exports while keeping people deprived of food and education at home does not help. How can we achieve such modernised agriculture but not have a toilet in every school?! I still think Lula is the best for Brazil, he is not ruining what has been achieved, and has already proved this not to be his intention. He is widening Brazil's trade throught several bilateral agreement, while our previous president only looked at Europe and the US. Plus, he is still the best hope for social reforms. He is probably the only person who looks both to the MST and to agrobusiness. And they are not opposite. Brazil is huge and has space both for family agriculre and big business stuff as well.
Lets keep Lula
written by Guest, February 01, 2005
Of course Lula is going to continue to do what is necessary for the growth of Brazil's agriculture. So will the oppsition, if elected. So would any president. the difference between different candidates today in on how to spend the national budget in the benefit of the people. Incresing exports while keeping people deprived of food and education at home does not help. How can we achieve such modernised agriculture but not have a toilet in every school?! I still think Lula is the best for Brazil, he is not ruining what has been achieved, and has already proved this not to be his intention. He is widening Brazil's trade throught several bilateral agreement, while our previous president only looked at Europe and the US. Plus, he is still the best hope for social reforms. He is probably the only person who looks both to the MST and to agrobusiness. And they are not opposite. Brazil is huge and has space both for family agriculre and big business stuff as well.
Incredible
written by Guest, February 05, 2005
I just finished listening to an interview with Franz Fischler, the European Union's Agriculture Commissioner at the World Trade Organisation
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/pro...536129.stm

Here is a quote from him M.R Fischler
"We reduced really drastically our export subsidies. We went down from 25% to 9% and we will reduce it further. We offered the possibility that we are prepared to phase out altogether export subsidies for those products which are the interest of developing countries."

He is saying that they reduced the amount of EXPORT subsidies ( not subsidies in general) from 25% to 9% of their TOTAL BUDGET. I don´t think this means anything. The real question is if these subsidies as distorting trade regardless of the reduction.

Further on Mr Fischler goes on to say that a new system must be established where "poor" countries will be benefited. He says that " competitive" countries like Brazil and Australia should not be allowed to get the share of the market that their competitiveness would allow them.

Basically the european union wants to judge on who should benefit regardless of who is better. This is a disaster not to mention that a closer look at such " lovely intentions" reveal that regardless of how competitive you are WE ( the european union) will decide who the market share goes to according to our views and our interests. This is bogus. I think there should be no subsidies and if the consumer wants to benefit a certain country or region he should pay the price for their products according to market value and the government should not make all the consumers pay a certain price to benefit the country or region that THEY selected. In other words Brazil who would be able to stretch its competitive muscle is not allowed to do so because african countries are in worse conditions than brazil.
Lets look at this from a diferent angle. Brazil is in a worse condition than europe and the united states so lets give preferential treatment to brazilian airplane manufacturer embraer over canadian bombardier and Airbus and Boeing when it comes to aircraft purchases. This would be unaceptable to both americans and eurpeans but the eurpeans think it is their right to make the same decision concerning agricultural goods.
I think this will drag down for a long time because the tipping point towards a rational agreement were the americans and they decided to increase their subsidies instead of taking the traditional free market path that most republican administrations have taken during history.
By the way, remeber that shrimp fallacy link i sent a few months ago. It was under judgement back then but now the american shrimp farmers have won and brazilian shrimp will suffer a larger tarrif.
It is incredible.

hoe man
written by Guest, March 10, 2005
what ever in the world do you mean

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