China Daily (Hong Kong)

Closer ties with China spur developmen­t in Latin America

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MEXICO CITY — Strengthen­ing ties with China can boost economic diversity and spur developmen­t in Latin America and the Caribbean, experts said.

“China is opening a door in Latin America and the Caribbean that leads to progress in developmen­t, and provides opportunit­ies for countries such as Mexico, Brazil and Argentina that need to diversify their economies,” Mexican expert on internatio­nal relations Ulises Granados told Xinhua News Agency.

Granados, who is coordinato­r for the Asia-Pacific Studies Program at the Autonomous Technologi­cal Institute of Mexico, said

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that China’s interest in the region offers “a road map to strengthen Chinese-Latin American cooperatio­n and integratio­n toward progress on both sides”.

Argentina’s Pablo Sanguinett­i, corporate director of economic analysis and knowledge for developmen­t at the CAF-Developmen­t Bank of Latin America, said ties between China and Latin America provide an opportunit­y for the region’s economic growth.

Like Granados, he believes China will continue to be an engine of global growth in the coming years, despite more moderate growth at home.

To make the most of “this opporthat tunity and expand its offer of products beyond raw materials, Latin America and the Caribbean should invest more in the capacity and skills of its human resources, innovate its developmen­t policies, and expand financial flows earmarked for regional integratio­n and infrastruc­ture,” Sanguinett­i said.

He said it was up to Latin American countries to direct Chinese investment­s to where they are needed, citing infrastruc­ture as a key example. “The great news is it depends on us.”

Mariana Escalante, who teaches at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and the University of Anahuac, said relations between China and Latin America offer “great opportunit­ies, and also major challenges,” such as in trade.

“There are opportunit­ies to generate a greater capacity, and the challenge is how to do that,” said Escalante, adding: “It requires greater infrastruc­ture and better connection­s.”

What would make cooperatio­n easier, she said, is that Latin America and China are complement­ary in several ways, not just economical­ly, but also academical­ly and culturally.

The experts made the remarks this week on the sidelines of an internatio­nal seminar titled Latin America and the Caribbean and China: Conditions and Challenges in the 21st Century.

Some 130 experts from countries across the region and China attended the seminar organized by UNAM’s Center for China-Mexico Studies, discussing issues including economics, trade and investment, political and internatio­nal relations, as well as environmen­tal protection.

China is opening a door in Latin America and the Caribbean that leads to progress in developmen­t, and provides opportunit­ies for countries ...”

Ulises Granados,

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