International | The Telegram

Marco Rubio will find China is hard to beat in Latin America

China buys lithium, copper and bull semen, and doesn’t export its ideology

An illustration of a side profile portrait of Xi Jinping with his eyes on a globe showing South America.
Illustration: Ellie Foreman-Peck

SINCE ITS founding by landowners in 1866, the Rural Society of Argentina—motto, “To Cultivate the Soil is to Serve the Nation”—has been a potent ally for governments of the right and a daunting foe for the left. The society’s campus in Buenos Aires, home to a big annual agricultural fair, dominates a city block in the heart of the capital. Hosting The Telegram for a chat about geopolitics, society officers deplore decades of economic mismanagement by populist left-leaning governments, which caused inflation to soar and the Argentine currency to sink. On the way out, they show him some of the society’s historic treasures, including a carved armchair used by the late Pope John Paul II.

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This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “Why China is hard to beat in Latin America”

From the January 18th 2025 edition

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