East Timor’s former Ambassador to Cuba, who also served as Counsellor in the Timor-Leste embassy in Beijing, offers a synopsis of how China’s ongoing economic expansion has reached its way into the United States backyard through Latin America.
“In early March of 2023, General Laura Richardson, head of the United States Southern Command, told a U.S. congressional hearing that Chinese actions in South America posed a threat to U.S. safety. According to General Richardson, China is on a relentless march to replace the United States as the leader in the region.
While China’s presence in the region has grown substantially in the past decade, it is unlikely that China will replace the United States as the dominant political, economic, and military power in Latin America for the foreseeable future.
On the economic front, China has made inroads into South America and the Caribbean, a region where U.S. power once went unchallenged. Starting in the late 1990s, Chinese interest in South America and the Caribbean began to grow.
In order to sustain its unprecedented economic growth China began to search for oil and other raw materials. In 2000, Chinese trade with the region totaled $12 billion, reaching $314.8 billion in 2021. In 2023, China is the largest trading partner of nine countries in the region: Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Cuba, Chile, Peru, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Venezuela.
While the growth in trade between China and the region is impressive, the United States remains Latin America and the Caribbean’s largest trading partner. In 2020, U.S. trade with the region was $758.2 billion. But 71% of this trade was with Mexico. In 2021, Chinese foreign direct investment in the region totaled $130 billion.
Before the Covid-19 pandemic, China was the biggest lender to the region, with Chinese development banks having issued $66.5 billion in loans — mostly for infrastructure projects that offer Chinese companies better access to the region’s rich natural resources. A small portion of these loans were provided under China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
While China’s economic footprint in the region has increased significantly, the United States and the European Union remain the largest foreign investors, accounting for 36% and 34% of total investment respectively.
As China faces an economic slowdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Chinese loans have dried up. When countries in the region fall into financial crisis, Western institutions such as the International Monetary Fund have provided the lion’s share of structural adjustment loans, not China.
The extent to which China’s economic gains in the region have resulted in political and diplomatic influence is unclear. While China has been Brazil’s largest trading partner for over a decade, tensions have arisen under both left- and right-wing Brazilian governments.
In Panama, after relentless U.S. pressure, several multibillion-dollar infrastructure contracts initially awarded to Chinese companies were canceled and given to South Korean and Japanese companies.
During her testimony to Congress, General Richardson also warned that China has increased its support for anti-U.S. regimes in the region including Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua.
But with the exception of Venezuela, Chinese investment and trade with these countries is minimal compared with its presence in most other countries in the region. In the cases of Cuba and Nicaragua, their desperate economic situations and U.S. sanctions render them less attractive to China.
In the defense and security sector, China has made modest inroads into the region. While the number of South American and Caribbean military and security officers going to China for training has increased, the United States remains the primary destination for training thousands of officers from the region. The United States has dozens of bases and other installations throughout the region and is the region’s ultimate guarantor of security.
While the power of the United States in the region remains solid, challenges on the economic front are increasing. No other power — not even the Soviet Union — has been able to challenge U.S. economic dominance of the region.
Apart from in Cuba, Soviet trade and aid to the region was negligible and its diplomatic influence was limited. While most countries in the region want to maintain close ties with the United States, they also want the benefits of China’s massive trade and investment flows.
On the eve of the pandemic, total trade between China and Latin America had hit $314.8 billion. Chinese foreign direct investment in Latin America was about $130 billion and net development lending by the China Development Bank and Export–Import Bank of China was about $66.5 billion. Taking 2000 as the baseline, the figures in all three categories have grown exponentially.
While trade and FDI inflows dipped slightly during the pandemic, Chinese development lending to the region dropped to zero in 2020. With just two years of operation in Latin America and the Caribbean, the BRI accounts for only a few million of the $43.5 billion disbursed to the region by Chinese policy banks between 2015 and 2019.
China was able to build such a strong presence in Latin America and the Caribbean in large part due to U.S. neglect of the region. The United States can no longer take the region for granted. Perhaps Washington should start treating Latin America as its front yard rather than its backyard”. -Loro Horta, Asian Times
China’s strong economic presence in Latin America and the Caribbean, a traditional sphere of U.S. influence, is becoming increasingly significant in the broader contest for worldwide primacy between China and the United States.
Given the history of the United States making its influence felt in the disputed South China Sea, it strikes one as warranted when Beijing leverages its economic might to further its strategic goals through its Belt and Road Initiative.
It’s also completely understandable as to why countries outside of the United States' influence would be eager to break free from the shackles of a unipolar hegemony in exchange for a multipolar world.