When it comes to emerging market trade stars, many people's first reaction is China. But now, that's no longer the case—China's data is too vast, forming its own category, and other emerging countries need to be considered separately. So among these remaining countries, who is the true winner in international trade? The answer is Brazil.



Looking at data from 2000 to 2025 makes this clear. The trade surplus curves of many Latin American countries, South Africa, and Turkey generally rose before 2013, then? They mostly disappeared. Only Brazil stands out, with its surplus rebounding and reaching new highs. In contrast, Turkey's situation worsens, with its trade deficit continuously expanding. Behind this is the famous "Erdogan Economics"—printing money to spur development; who cares about the money, deficits are just numbers. Relying on foreign capital, hot money, tourism, and remittances to survive.

Brazil's ability to turn the tide isn't complicated: it found a major buyer—China. Soybeans and iron ore trade are exceptionally booming, with China contributing 60% of Brazil's trade surplus. Plus, good luck struck when large oil fields were discovered, and Brazil truly made a fortune.

But there's a magical part—despite making such great profits, Brazil's economic growth isn't that impressive. Why? The industrial chain is too incomplete. The trade surplus hasn't translated into real economic takeoff.

Breaking down Brazil's利益分配 (benefit distribution) reveals the truth. The Brazilian government, local farms, Chinese buyers, and foreign-invested companies—all have their share. The government relies on state-owned enterprises' export income; farmers depend on selling agricultural products; Chinese companies, as buyers, ensure smooth trade and also help build port logistics infrastructure; but foreign-invested companies control the most critical links.

In agriculture and resource extraction, foreign giants dominate through seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, financing, commodity pricing, storage, logistics, processing, and export channels, tightly gripping the industry's lifeline, resulting in capturing the lion's share of profits. Numerically, Brazil's trade surplus looks good, but in reality, most of the profits are taken by foreign capital. Looking at another indicator—the current account performance—is mediocre. This explains why, despite seemingly earning so much money, ordinary people's lives haven't improved much. The government's and local producers' incomes can't sustain development.

This phenomenon reveals a harsh fact: Brazil's economy is deeply controlled by foreign capital, and it's difficult to break free.

China-Brazil relations are good because interests align—foreign capital also benefits, so there's no opposition. But if China aims to help Brazil establish a more favorable industrial chain structure and redistribute bargaining power? The resistance would be much greater. Brazil is already the closest resource cooperation partner with China, yet many issues remain. This is enough to show how thoroughly developing countries are controlled by global industry giants.

Interestingly, only three major countries in the world have the capacity to truly control foreign investment and not fear it—China, Russia, and India. Brazil? Can't do it. So it's understandable that Brazil has the weakest political strength among the BRICS countries.
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