Promoting India Latin America Collaboration

Paraguay moves up food chain

FT.com / World / Americas

Take record commodities prices, add a subtropical climate that gives farmers five harvests every 24 months and vast tracts of virgin arable land and it is no surprise that tiny Paraguay has emerged as one of the big beneficiaries of the global food crisis.

The International Monetary Fund reckons the country, whose history of poverty and entrenched corruption usually bills it as one of the world’s economic losers, has gained more from soaring food prices in terms of the boost to its trade balance than any other nation.

The fund estimates that food price rises in 2007-08 increased Paraguay’s trade balance by 12.2 per cent of its 2005 GDP, the only country worldwide to have a double-digit increase.

The IMF calculations do not factor in currency fluctuations and the escalating price of fertilisers and fuel. But they illustrate how often-overlooked Latin American countries such as Paraguay, Guyana and Uruguay have the potential to help feed the world while reaping big rewards for their underdeveloped economies.

Soyabeans are transforming Paraguay’s finances. The landlocked country is the world’s fourth largest soyabean exporter; production has nearly doubled in two years and the crop helped boost exports 77 per cent in 2007. Indeed the economy grew by 6.4 per cent last year, the highest rate in two decades.

“We think that if the current world situation continues, we could easily see [agricultural] investment of $3bn to $5bn [€3.4bn, £2.7bn] in the next five years,” says Christian Thielmann of Paraguay’s export promotion agency Rediex.

He says Argentine, Brazilian and Uruguayan investors are showing big interest in farming, livestock and forestry, attracted by tax breaks on machinery imports and a corporate rate of 10 per cent.

After a serious drought two years ago, soyabean production leapt to 6.8m tonnes in 2008 from 3.6m tonnes in 2006, according to the Paraguayan Chamber of Cereals and Oilseeds Exporters. “But it could reach 15m-18m in the next few years,” says Germán Ruíz, vice-president of Paraguay’s Rural Association.

Corn, sunflower and canola production also nearly tripled between the 2004/05 and 2006/07 seasons and wheat has risen, though more slowly. Héctor Cristaldo, president of a confederation of farm unions, sees “massive migration” out of cotton, a traditional staple, into sesame, a new cash crop that is entirely exported to Japan and Korea, raising vital revenues for a country where GDP per capita is just $4,500.


Uruguay – already the world’s seventh largest rice exporter, with no state subsidies but with yields that farmers say beat those in the US – is finding important new markets as world stocks decline and bigger producers restrict exports or increase tariffs to curb domestic food inflation.

“Europe, Iran, Iraq, Brazil and Peru don’t have enough supplies. Any would be prepared to buy more from Uruguay,” says Alfredo Crossa, president of Casarone, Uruguay’s second-largest rice miller. “We’re also developing sales to eastern Europe and the Caribbean.”

He says Uruguay, which exports 90 per cent of its rice, is on course to boost its 1.4m tonnes production by 20 per cent this year. With investment in irrigation, output could reach 2m tonnes in five years if prices stay high, he says.

Octacilio Echenagucía, president of the Rural Federation, forecasts a 50 per cent rise in Uruguay’s soyabean cultivation this year.

In Guyana, rainforest cloaks much of the country and only 2 per cent of land is devoted to agriculture, chiefly rice and sugar. Yet farming already brings in a third of export earnings and accounts for more than a third of GDP, which is just $3,900 per capita.

The agriculture ministry is forecasting that higher yields and rice prices will boost export earnings by a third this year.

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Real emerging property markets are to be found in South America

Many parts of Argentina, Chile and Uruguay are without doubt paradise on earth. Low population density, plenty of food and fresh water, unspoiled landscapes. If World Wars III, IV and V break out you can peacefully ride them out sipping wine in your hideaway in the Patagonia or in the Uruguayan countryside.
PropertyWire.com Features | News

‘Brazil is the big brother in terms of property investment and the country is currently experiencing a residential building bonanza, due entirely to its sound fiscal policy and low interest rates. But the other South American countries are showing signs of following in Brazil’s footsteps, particularly Argentina and Uruguay, with economies that are becoming healthier and more stable every day.

‘This will lead to more consumer confidence to invest in these emerging markets. I also expect there will be an overspill from Brazil. Those that perhaps want the lifestyle, weather or beach, but not specifically in Brazil, will look to neighbouring countries.

Argentina is a strong contender to catch up. ‘Argentina is simply the best place in the world right now. Buenos Aires is one of the world’s greatest and most liveable cities,’ said Doug Casey, founder of US based Casey Research, an independent investment research organisation.

Why you might ask? ‘The country is running a massive balance of trade surplus. The government is running a big fiscal surplus. Rich Europeans are piling in since Argentina is ethnically and culturally the most European country in the world,’ he added.

Argentina has beaches, ski centres, mountains to climb, the pampas to ride across, it’s just that not everyone knows it yet. The number of tourists is predicted to increase to around 10 million by 2010.

Nestling between the two is much smaller Uruguay. Recent figures show that Uruguay has 2.3 million tourists a year, almost half descending on Punta del Este. Argentines account for the majority of arrivals in Uruguay however the Brazilian slice of the market is increasing. A rise in European visitors is anticipated.

Ecotourism is also forging forward with many innovations on how to protect Uruguay’s biodiversity and natural resources at the same time as gaining benefit from them.
Golf is popular and there are three top notch 18-hole golf courses within the Punta del Este catchment area.

‘Although the concept of foreign purchase of investment property and holiday homes in Uruguay is still quite new, the process of buying property is kept simple by the Uruguayan Government. A foreigner has the same rights and incentives as a Uruguayan national, including access to locally-based finance,’ said Andy Welland, MD of GEM Estates, a specialist in the area.

There are no restrictions on transferring capital in and out of the country and whilst the majority of real estate agents in Uruguay add a minimum of 3% to the selling price for commission, most GEM Estates’ developments have this included in the list price, he added.

It is a similar story across the next border in Chile. It too has a stable economy, positive government and the beaches, mountains and attractions that have the potential to draw a huge number of tourists.

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Petrobras, India’s Reliance in talks on petrochemical JV -

MarketWatch

Brazilian energy giant Petroleo Brasileiro SA , or Petrobras, is in talks with Indian company Reliance Industries Ltd. on possible petrochemicals joint ventures in Brazil, a top Petrobras executive said Tuesday.

Petrobras and Reliance have discussed possible petrochemicals ventures in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco and in the southeastern state of Rio de Janeiro, said Petrobras Refining and Supply Director Paulo Roberto Costa in a company WebCast. “Talks regarding the Rio de Janeiro Petrochemicals Complex are preliminary,” he said. “Talks involving Pernambuco are more advanced.”

Costa said Petrobras was interested in what he called Reliance’s “great experience in the petrochemicals segment” in India.

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University opening new integrative medicine center

It would be great to have ayurvedic specialists exposed to the Amazonian plant diversity and working with native American healers to come up with new remedies.
The Associated Press:

Many academic health centers offer programs that include traditional Chinese treatments or Ayurvedic medicine from India. The University of New Mexico goes beyond that, says management of its new Center for Life.

“The uniqueness of our program is that we not only embrace Eastern and Western philosophies, but we try to integrate the traditions of New Mexico,” said Dr. Arti Prasad, the center’s director. Thus, Native American healers and Hispanic curanderas are invited to work with patients at the clinic.

The Center for Life, which opened Friday, offers what Prasad prefers to call “complementary medicine” — augmenting modern medicine with practices and treatments that may go back thousands of years in other cultures.

The philosophy has its basis in preventing disease, what Prasad describes as “keeping the body in balance, staying healthy, exercising, eating healthy and doing good things in your life.”

Western medicine works to find disease early with such tests as mammograms, while Eastern medicine steps in earlier to try to prevent disease, she said. If there’s an imbalance in the body and a person becomes ill, Eastern medicine tries to get the body back in balance, she said.

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Genpact Ltd. acquires delivery center in Guatemala

Cnn.com

Genpact Ltd., a business services outsourcer, on Monday said it purchased a delivery center in Guatemala City from GE Money, marking its first acquisition in Guatemala.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The deal with the subsidiary of General Electric Co. will extend Genpact’s Latin American presence beyond Mexico and improve its ability to provide business process services in English and Spanish.

The delivery center in Guatemala City will initially accommodate more than 700 professionals and has the capacity to grow to about 2,000. Its close proximity to the region’s largest public university is an advantage in attracting talent, Genpact said.

Genpact operates service delivery centers in China, Hungary, India, Mexico, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Romania, Spain and the United States.

It began as the India-based business process services operation for GE Capital in 1997.

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“Bishop of the poor” is Paraguay’s new president

The Observers

As for Paraguay’s new president, he advocates a “theological liberation of the Left”. He’s worked in the country’s poorest parishes and enjoys the reputation of being an honest man, a particularly important asset in a country where politics have become synonymous with corruption. Fernando Lugo said he would not marry during his five-year mandate, despite the Pope having lifted his vow of chastity. His sister will therefore act as the country’s first lady. The new president has also sought the advice of recognised experts, including the US Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz.

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India Won’t Ban Sugar Exports to Cool Domestic Prices

Bloomberg.com: Worldwide

India, the world’s second-biggest sugar producer, won’t limit exports to rein in domestic prices that have risen to more than a two-year high in the past two months amid forecasts of a smaller crop.

“We are not unduly worried and we have enough to keep prices in a certain price band,” Federal Food Secretary T. Nanda Kumar, said in an interview in New Delhi. “At this stage, no,” he said, responding to speculation that the government may ban sales abroad to curb prices.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government has restricted exports of rice, wheat, corn and cooking oil to tame inflation that’s at a 16-year high. Singh faces elections in less than a year and higher food costs can mar poll prospects in a country where more than half the people survive on less than $2 a day.

Wholesale rates at Vashi, a Mumbai suburb and the nation’s biggest sugar market, have reached 19,730 rupees ($453) a metric ton, exceeding prices on London’s Liffe exchange, a benchmark for refined sugar.

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Honey trap in the making?

ET-Features-The Economic Times

First, Brazil’s cane area is expanding. It has sown 8 mn ha for the 2008-09 season, up 12%. (This is almost double India’s acreage this year.) Brazil will also harvest 12% more cane than last year. Even so, Brazil’s cane farms add up to just 2% of its total farm land. So they are still not under any assault from food-vs-fuel activists and have plenty of room to grow. Supply of cane is plentiful this year.

Two, mills are growing in number and size. Thirty new mills should start operations this season apart from expansions by older mills. That means increased competitive pressure.

Foreign investment and interest in Brazilian sugar sector has never been higher. Mills controlled by foreign investors crushed 11.5% of all sugarcane crushed in Brazil last year. MNCs now control 10% of Brazil’s ethanol production and growing.


Three,
meanwhile all mills are coping with rising cost of growing, harvesting and
processing cane. It now costs 11% more to plant cane. The average cost per cut
has increased 30% due to the sharp increase in the cost of inputs such as
fertilisers.

Four, while ethanol
and power are two significant revenue streams, they are no match for sugar.
Speaking at Stanford last November, Cosan CFO Paulo Diniz broke down
Cosan’s $1.7 bn in revenue: 61% from sugar sales, 33% from ethanol sales,
and 6% from cogen power sales. That proportion is fairly typical. So don’t
believe anyone who says Brazilians have gone off
sugar.

Five, Brazil plans to
increase ethanol exports 25% to almost 5 billion litres. Of this, over 3 billion
litres could potentially be exported to the US, either directly or through the
Caribbean Basin Initiative. That sounds like a great profit opportunity. But
Brazil’s competitiveness in the US after paying a 55 cents-per-gallon
import duty depends on local corn
prices.

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Gap year: discover the Latin spirit

The Independent

Latin America has incredible scenery, mind blowing ancient ruins and an indefatigable party spirit throughout, though each country has a distinct identity.

Top tourist sites include the Incan ruins at Machu Picchu, the Iguazu Falls, which straddle Brazil and Argentina, the Bolivian salt flats and the Galapagos Islands (though a visit here is expensive). Take time to consider your priorities: would you rather party in Rio, or lose yourself trekking in the Patagonia wilderness?

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How rich is Latin America?

inca kola news

Brazil and Mexico are still relatively well off, but Chile now stands out as the region’s richest country, followed by Venezuela. In fact, there’s a distinct split between eight states (in pecking order; Chile, Venezuela, Mexico, Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina, Costa Rica, Panama) and the rest, as none of the others make it above U$4,000 per capita. Bottom of the pile comes Nicaragua, with a GDP/capita of just U$989.

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