Baby Clothes Maintain a Brazilian City Alive. Now They Want to Sell Overseas

The baby clothes producers from the Local Productive Arrangement (LPA) of Terra Roxa, city in the southern Brazilian state of Paraná, are working to win the foreign market.

Formed two years ago, the LPA of Baby Fashion is the first and only one in Brazil. In spite of being new to the market, the clothes for newborns have already been shipped to France, Spain, England, Colombia, Portugal and Paraguay.

"Exports are still small. We are prospecting markets," said the technical consultant at Sebrae and advisor at the APL, Jaime Tezza.

Last year, a group of companies from the LPA visited Fimi, fair in the children’s and youngsters’ sector in Valencia, in Spain. According to Tezza, the idea is to participate in new international fairs and invest in marketing and promotion.

According to information from the Sebrae News Agency, the LPA is formed by 43 companies in Terra Roxa, city with one of the lowest unemployment rates in Paraná.

Together they produce 300,000 pieces per month and have revenues of US$ 1.37 million monthly. The segment of baby clothes is responsible for 30% of the city’s economy and generates 2,500 direct jobs.

Baby Fashion

Forming the LPA was a joint work of several entities, amongst them the Brazilian Micro and Small Business Support Service (Sebrae), Bank of Brazil, the federal bank Caixa Econômica Federal, the city hall and 25 entrepreneurs.

In spite of the LPA being only two years old, the production of baby fashion in the city started nearly 20 years ago. It all started with a mother that made the baby clothes for her first two children, which attracted looks by the other women. The orders started coming up and so the seamstresses started specializing in clothes for zero to one-year-old babies.

Located on the western border of Paraná, 600 kilometers away from the state’s capital city, Curitiba, and about 100 kilometers away from the border with Paraguay and the Brazilian midwestern state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Terra Roxa has 18,000 inhabitants. The city’s main economic activity used to be coffee.

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil to Help African Countries Make Their Own AIDS Drugs

Brazil will help build medication factories in Mozambique and Nigeria, and provide technical training ...

Urban Man

Since the last census in 1991, the population of Brazil has increased by 1.6 ...

Coffee Producers Gather in Brazil for World Conference

The Second World Coffee Conference, the most important international gathering of world coffee producers, ...

Little Piauí­, in Brazil, Wants to Sell More than Cashew to the Arabs

The northeastern Brazilian state of PiauÀ­ wants to attract Arab capital for the fruit ...

WHO Uses Brazil Expertise to Fight Smoking Worldwide

Brazil will contribute its experience with tobacco control programs to the World Health Organization’s ...

Still Without an Explanation Brazil Government Refuses to Talk About Blackout

For Brazil's chief of staff and hand-picked candidate to succeed president Lula, minister Dilma ...

From Its Annual 175 Million Flip-Flops Brazil Alpargatas Exports 10%

One of the largest Brazilian shoe makers, São Paulo Alpargatas company, intends to triple ...

Japam-born Yukachan, Carnaval ambassador in Bahia, Brazil

Brazil: New Ambassador of Bahia’s Carnaval, a Japanese Girl, Ruffles Feathers

When winter arrived in the Japanese city of Nagoya during the late 90s, a ...

Ronaldinho Forsees Tough Defenses Against Brazil at World Cup

Ronaldinho knows being the best player in the world has its burdens. One of ...

Brazilian Financial Market Applauds Tax Exemption for Foreigners

The President of Brazil’s National Association of Financial Market Institutions (ANDIMA), Alfredo Neves Penteado ...