Market Diversification Boosts Brazilian Exports

Exports shipped to countries such as Trinidad and Tobago, Poland, and Algeria, with which Brazil had no trading tradition, earned over US$ 4 billion in 2004.

According to the secretary of Foreign Trade of the Ministry of Development, Ivan Ramalho, the addition of these new markets to Brazil’s list of foreign trade partners constituted a significant change in the country’s export profile.


“We experienced a powerful process of market diversification. The biggest export increases in 2004 occurred in sales to non-traditional markets, such as the Middle East, Eastern Europe, the Caribbean, and some African countries,” he affirmed.


According to Ramalho, the United States, which has historically been the largest buyer of Brazilian products, accounted for “only 20% of what the country exported.” “The other 80% now goes to scores of other countries,” he explained.


Another significant change in Brazil’s export profile, Ramalho highlighted, was the addition of 600 new products to the country’s export list, which is made up of 7,100 items.


40 years ago, 93% of what Brazil exported consisted of non-industrial raw materials, such as ore and grains, or semi-manufactured goods with little added value, such as soybean meal and timber.


Only 6% represented manufactured products with high added value, such as tractors and airplanes.


Currently, approximately 45% of the country’s exports is composed of raw materials and semi-manufactured goods, while 55% are manufactured products.


The items that experienced the highest rates of growth were aircraft (66.6%) and tractors (90.4%).


The Brazilian record in terms of the percentage of manufactured goods exported was in 1993, when 59% of the country’s exports represented this category of products.


The chief regions to which Brazil’s exports increased in 2004 were the Mercosur (57.1%) – to Argentina alone the growth amounted to 61.7%); the ALADI (Latin American Integration Association, made up of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela), with a 48.8% growth rate when it comes to the non-Mercosur members; Africa (48.4%); the Middle East (31.4%); the European Union (30.9%); Asia (24.7%); Eastern Europe (22.7%); and the United States (20.4%).


Translation: David Silberstein
Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Three More Brazilian Planes Sold to Middle East

Embraer, the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer, announced the sale of three executive jets to United ...

Brazil Set to Make Large Helicopters. Government Will Be Client

A Brazilian-French cooperation agreement in the military aerospace sector has just been signed between ...

Brazilian Army Worried About US Military Build Up on Brazil’s Borders

It is because of the strategic importance of South America that the United States ...

As Expected, Brazil’s Key Interest Rate Drops to Still High 15.75%

Wednesday, April 19, Brazil’s equivalent of the Fed, the Monetary Policy Committee (Comitê de ...

Stones Roll Their Biggest Show Ever in Rio, Brazil

Just a week before Carnaval, the Rolling Stones drew an estimated one and a ...

After Discovering Joí£o Pessoa I’m Moving to Brazil and Bringing My Friends

My name is Richard Conti. I am originally from New York City. Being raised ...

Ecologists Condemn Venezuela-Brazil Gas Pipeline as Risky and Eco- Unfriendly

Experts and ministers from Venezuela, Brazil and Argentina met Wednesday and Thursday, March 1st ...

19 Years Later, Brazilian Jury Acquits Defendant on Missionary Death

The seven jurors of the second trial related to the murder of Cimi’s  (Indianist ...

With Nepotism Banned in Brazil by Supreme Scores Lose Jobs in Courts

By a vote of 9 to 1, the Brazilian Supreme Court (Supremo Tribunal Federal) ...

Brazilian Indian Becomes a Doctor in Havana. She’s First One to Do So

Maria da Glória Oliveira da Silva, of the Pataxó Hã-Hã-Hãe people, has just graduated ...