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《TAIPEI TIMES》 Paraguay to court Taiwanese investors

2023/08/02 03:00

Then-Central Bank of Paraguay president Carlos Fernandez Valdovinos, who is to become the minister of finance on Aug. 15, speaks during an interview in Asuncion on July 31, 2017. Photo: Reuters

PLANNING TO DIVERSIFY: The South American diplomatic ally’s incoming finance minister said that it is risky to be overly reliant on China as a buyer of raw materials

/ Reuters, ASUNCION

Paraguay is seeking more Taiwanese investment to diversify its farm-driven economy focused on exporting raw materials to China, incoming Paraguayan minister of finance Carlos Fernandez Valdovinos said in an interview.

Paraguay remains the only South American nation with formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan. As Paraguay prepares for the Aug. 15 inauguration of the next government, it has reinforced its 70-year friendship with Taipei, even as China ramps up diplomatic and military pressure.

“We are very good at producing soybeans and meat, but we must diversify,” Fernandez at his temporary office in Asuncion on Friday last week. “We ask Taiwan to help us with that, through investments from its private sector.”

A Taiwanese delegation, including business leaders, is to travel to Paraguay this month for the inauguration of Paraguayan president-elect Santiago Pena, he added.

Paraguayan farmers who support switching ties to China to boost the landlocked country’s agricultural exports “are not seeing the risks” that Beijing presents, Fernandez said.

China, as a buyer of raw materials from Paraguay with no added value, “is probably convenient for some sectors,” Fernandez said. “But as a strategy for the economic and social development of Paraguay, it is not convenient for us to continue betting solely and exclusively on the main export sectors.”

Paraguay’s cattle ranchers had been pressuring officials to gain access to the lucrative Chinese market for their beef before the April 30 election, which Pena won by a sizeable margin.

Big meatpackers say they can get better prices elsewhere, as demand for more specialized cuts and processed foods grows.

“China has lowered prices for beef cuts and we see the immediate effect of that across the border in Brazil and Uruguay,” said Jair Antonio de Lima, founder and president of Paraguayan meatpacking firm Concepcion, in an interview.

Volume sales of Uruguayan beef in the first half of this year to China have fallen as much as 39.9 percent from a year earlier.

“Taiwan is still an important market for us, prices there are better than in China,” Lima said.

Paraguay hopes this year to conclude a lengthy certification process to export beef to the US, which could also pave the way to other attractive markets such as Japan and South Korea, Fernandez said.

新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES

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