La influencia
China crece en el patio trasero de EE.UU.
Publicado en
China Daily, 25 de junio 2012, pag. 9
China's influence grows in US' 'backyard'
Updated: 2012-06-25 08:04
By Carlos Aquino ( China Daily)
Not so long ago, Latin America
was considered the "backyard" of the United States, but this is now
changing. In the past decade China's trade, investment and economic cooperation
with the region has increased, challenging the US' position in Latin America.
The US' importance as a market for Latin American goods was so
big that there was a time it was said: "When the US economy sneezes, Latin
American countries catch a cold." But as China has now become a larger
export destination for some Latin American countries, the same can now be said
of China. For example, its influence in the Peruvian economy is very big, to
the point that Luis Miguel Castilla, Peru's finance minister, has said
"the truth is I light a little candle every day and pray that China's
growth doesn't fall".
China's emergence as an economic power and its needs for natural
resources and food, which Latin American countries have in abundance, means
China is now the biggest trade partner of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru.
And China has free trade agreements with Chile, Costa Rica and Peru that will
enhance that relationship.
In the past decade trade between the US and Latin American
countries increased twice but the trade between China and Latin American
countries grew 17 times. Also investment from China is growing at a fast pace.
In global terms, the US is still the biggest trade partner of the region but it
is only a matter of time before China claims that role.
Latin American countries are interested in China not only
because it buys their raw materials at higher prices, but also because they
want to sell manufactured goods to the growing and affluent Chinese middle
class, and because they find it easier to do business with China. For example,
China lends money to them more easily than institutions such as the World Bank,
and countries such as Venezuela and Argentina that cannot get loans from
international banks get loans from China, which attaches few conditions to the
loans. In fact, China, through entities like the Export-Import Bank of China
and the China Development Bank, lent more money to Latin American countries in
2010 than the World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank and US government put
together.
Another reason for the US losing its influence in Latin America
is that its economy is not doing so well. While Latin American countries are
growing, due in no small part to the demand from China, the US is facing the
same problems Latin American countries suffered 20 years ago, namely a big
government deficit and debt. The US demanded economic reforms in Latin American
countries 20 years ago, and now it is the turn of Latin American countries to
demand that the US do those reforms, mainly slashing government spending.
Also Latin American countries are not happy with the US because
it still opposes Cuba's integration in the Organization of American States.
Also the region does not agree with the US' approach to fighting the drug trade
and resolving the immigration problem from the region to the US.
But the US' influence is still big in the region, not only
because it is the biggest economic power in the world, but also because it still
attracts the best talent from the region to study in its universities and
because its culture, such as music and movies, is much in demand by people in
the region.
China will need to build up its soft power, based on its appeal
as one of the oldest civilizations in the world, its advanced culture, its
artistic achievements, its magnificent and unique monuments like the Great
Wall, which everyone should visit, its wonderful food, etc. Interestingly,
China's appeal in Latin America is strong, as many people want to learn its
language, and its standing is even superior to the US in the sense that in many
opinion polls, China is considered more friendly to the region than the US and
its people are seen as working and studying very hard. Latin American people
are also very impressed by its strong economic performance.
China's influence in the region will increase and will not
encounter US opposition as long as it does not try to exert political
influence. But China will face challenges in the region as its economic
presence increases, because it is one thing to have Chinese goods in the
markets competing with regional companies, but it is another to have Chinese
companies and Chinese people there. In this regard China could learn from the
US' experience of having to deal with local people, learning their
idiosyncrasies, so as to avoid misunderstandings.
As for the Latin American countries, it is beneficial to have
good relationships with the No 1 and No 2 economic powers in the world. Latin
America's quest for development needs both countries, in a balanced and
pragmatic approach. Also, as China and Latin American countries are both
developing economies, they can learn from each other's successes and failures.
The author is a professor of economics at San Marcos National
University in Lima, Peru.
(China Daily 06/25/2012 page9)
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