Saturday, May 2, 2026

The New Center-Periphery Relations


A new paper (in Portuguese) by Carlos Medeiros and Esther Majerowicz analyzes the economic relationship between China and Brazil using the center–periphery framework developed by Raúl Prebisch. It argues that, in the 21st century, this relationship reflects a dual process: China’s rise as a new global economic “center” and Brazil’s passive adaptation as a peripheral economy, reinforcing asymmetric development patterns.

A key claim is that China has become central not just because of its size, but because it is now a major source of industrial production and technological innovation, influencing global demand, trade patterns, and commodity prices. Its growth has reshaped the world economy, especially by increasing demand for raw materials and lowering prices of manufactured goods. For Brazil, this has led to a reprimarization of exports. The country increasingly exports commodities (soy, iron ore, oil) to China while importing manufactured goods. This pattern strengthens traditional center–periphery dynamics, despite being framed politically as South–South cooperation. This suggests similar problems as identified by myself and Esteban Pérez in a paper discussing the development strategies in Latin America. The main difference is that in the last decade and a half, the central position of China is more clear, even if the typical notion that American hegemony is over has been exaggerated in American liberal circles.

The authors identify two possible development paths. The dominant one is a business as usual strategy, aligned with Chinese demand and Brazilian agribusiness and mining interests, which deepens dependency. The alternative is a developmental strategy based on diversification, industrial upgrading, and technological cooperation, but this path seems currently unlikely. They also emphasize that Chinese investment in Brazil is concentrated in extractive industries and infrastructure, reinforcing the existing specialization pattern, although there are some emerging opportunities in sectors like renewable energy and digital technologies.

Finally, the paper argues that shifting toward a more balanced relationship would require active state planning, political will, and supportive social coalitions in Brazil. Without these, the current asymmetrical structure is likely to persist or deepen.

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