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The following is a list of the exports of Brazil. Data is for 2012, in billions of United States dollars, as reported by The Observatory of Economic Complexity. Currently the top twenty exports are listed. #
The main investors in Brazil are the United States, Spain, and Belgium. With the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff and the embezzlement scandal behind them, Brazil is set to benefit from stronger commodity prices and attract more foreign investment. [131] Brazil's top exports in 2015 were soya, petroleum, iron ore, raw cane sugar, and oil-cake. [132]
In 2019, among the ten products that Brazil exports the most and that generate the most value, eight come from the agribusiness. Although still modest, the country's exports have evolved, and today they are more diversified than they were in the past. At the beginning of the 20th century, 70% of Brazilian exports were restricted to coffee.
World map showing commodity exports as share of merchandise exports percentage according to UNCTAD State of Commodity Dependence Report 2018-2019 Grain export at the Port of Santos. Brazil's trade was commodity-dependent in 2018–19 having been less so in 2008–9.
Soy is the most important product on the country's export basket: it is the 1st place on the list, with 12% of the country's exports, at a value of U $26 billion in 2019; the country also exports soybean meal, which is the 8th most exported product (2.6% of Brazilian exports, worth U $5.8 billion in 2019) and soy oil (1.0 million tonnes in 2019 ...
The EU is Brazil's leading trade partner and represented 18.3% of Brazil's total trade in 2017. [6] In 2007, the EU imported €32.3 billion in Brazilian goods and exported €21.2 billion in goods to Brazil. [7] Brazil's exports to the EU are mainly primary products (primarily agricultural) however a third is made up of manufactured products.
Brazil GDP per capita, 1800 to 2018. Brazil's economic policy can be broadly defined by the Brazilian government's choice of fiscal policies, and the Brazilian Central Bank’s choice of monetary policies. Throughout the history of the country, economic policy has changed depending on administration in power, producing different results.
The bean was the country's main export product for almost 100 years. [19] It was like this all the way to 1945, and coffee exports continued to amount to a third of Brazil's revenue even in 1970. [11] Even during the Empire, Brazil became the world's leading coffee producer, accounting for more than 60% of all the country's exports. [20]