Foreign trade of Argentina

Foreign trade of Argentina includes economic activities both within and outside Argentina especially with regard to merchandise exports and imports, as well as trade in services.

Colonial and early history

Argentina's primary exports in colonial times were largely limited to salted beef due to the fact that beef would not stay fresh during trans-Atlantic shipping - a problem which similarly precluded most grain exports until the 1870s.[1][2]

Modern history

Argentina developed an agro-export model where they were highly dependent on the external sector, exporting commodities mostly to Western Europe. Much as colonial elites tried to emulate European styles, a wave of European investment and immigration so reshaped local culture and architecture in the late 19th and early 20th centuries (primarily in the Pampas area), that visitors often compared Buenos Aires with Paris.[2]

Agriculturally and thinly populated, Argentina recorded trade surpluses for most of the period between 1900 and 1948, including a cumulative US$1 billion during World War I and US$1.7 billion during World War II.[3] But record taxes on grain exports imposed by the administration of President Juan Perón (1946-55) and an increasing need for costly fuel and machinery helped result in a nearly-unbroken string of trade deficits between 1949 and 1962.[4]

Perón and, most notably, President Arturo Frondizi (1958-62), encouraged foreign as well as local investment in energy and industry as part of a developmentalist policy of import substitution industrialization. Trade deficits in the 1950s initially limited development due to the need for expensive machinery and supplies and a shortage of foreign exchange. But drawn to an economy that provided Latin America's highest standard of living, domestic and foreign investors responded, industrial production more than doubled, and the country's trade position became modestly positive throughout the 1963–79 era, even as domestic demand grew.[3][4]

Policies of "free trade" financial deregulation pursued by Argentina's last dictatorship led to a sudden, record deficit in 1980 and, by 1981, a mountain of bad debts and financial collapse. The climate of slack domestic demand that prevailed in Argentina throughout the 1980s resulted in a cumulative US$38 billion in surpluses from 1982 to 1991;[3] this brought the economy little direct benefit, however, as much of this was deposited abroad during that era of interest payment burdens and financial instability.[5]

Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo enacted the Convertibility Law of 1991, pegging the monetary value of the Argentine peso to the United States dollar. The fixed exchange rate (1 peso to the dollar) allowed for a macroeconomic stabilization. Taking advantage of this low exchange rate, on the lower tariffs on imports and on the reappearance of credit after the free trade liberalization measures taken by President Carlos Menem's administration, Argentine firms and consumers tripled capital goods purchases from 1990 to 1994, while depressed auto sales rose by fivefold. The influx of imported machines and supplies helped the modernization of the country's industrial base; but it negatively impacted its trade balance, which accumulated US$22 billion in deficits from 1992 to 1999;[3] the current account deficit, which would include growing foreign debt interest payments and deficits in trade in services, reached a record deficit of US$14 billion in 1998 alone.[6]

Relying on sizable foreign investment inflows to balance the current account, these did not suffice and the Central Bank was again forced to resort to borrowing to protect the peso's value against such pressure (mostly by floating bonds, then the most sought after in the developing world). Recession helped lead to a US$1 billion surplus in 2000 and another US$6 billion in 2001;[3] but it was too little, too late. Buffeted by generalized global instability and mounting capital flight, international markets massively shorted Argentine bonds in the second half of 2001 and on December 23, following a spate of unpopular crisis measures, the Argentine government declared a default on US$85 billion of its bonds - the largest sovereign debt default in history.[7]

Crisis and recovery

Immediately after the collapse of the Argentine economy at the end of 2001 and the devaluation of the peso in 2002, imports fell over half and Argentina's trade surplus soared to over US$16 billion,[3] providing for the first current account surplus since 1990. As recovery ensued and the exchange rate stabilized around 3 pesos/dollar, exports (mainly soy, cereals and other agricultural products, as well as machinery and fuels) grew steadily.

Imports began recovering sharply in 2003, as both the purchasing power of the peso and domestic demand increased, and, despite this, from 2003 to 2011 the nation's merchandise trade balance recorded a cumulative US$115 billion in surpluses.[8] These surpluses were bolstered as much by growing exports as by a marked recovery in terms of trade for Argentina, which by 2010 had improved 40% over the level prevailing in the 1990s.[8] The nation's perennial trade deficit in manufactures widened during this expansion, however, and exceeded US$30 billion in 2011.[9] Accordingly, the system of non-automatic import licensing was extended in 2011,[10] and regulations were enacted for the auto sector establishing a model by which a company's future imports would be determined by their exports (though not necessarily in the same rubric).[11] Domestic production grew to supply the majority of the Argentine market in a number of important rubrics historically dominated by imports amid these changes, including diverse manufactures such as information technology, major appliances, footwear, and farm machinery.[12][13][14]

A collapse in global commodity prices in 2014 led to trade deficits for most of the 2015-18 period,[3][15] culminating in a record current account deficit in 2017 of US$31 billion and an ensuing foreign debt crisis. The 2018 crisis, however, pushed imports down by 37% from 2017 to 2020, yielding US$50 billion in cumulative trade surpluses from 2019 to 2022[3] despite a 92% recovery in imports from 2020 to 2022 - though practically nil in total current account surpluses, due to higher foreign debt interest outlays.[6]

Trade in services has historically been in deficit for Argentina, as both travel and foreign debt interest outlays often far outstrip services income. Annual services deficits averaged around US$5 billion in the 1980s and 1990s (mainly due to foreign debt payments) - but after the 2001 crisis, fell to around US$1 billion annually until 2007. Services deficits rose steadily afterward to a record US$9.7 billion in 2017, then easing to US$3.6 billion by 2021 - but jumping to around US$7 billion in 2022, largely as a result of renewed outbound travel by Argentines.[6]

Argentine foreign trade and current account balances

Argentine goods and services trade balances, and foreign debt, since 1970 (million US$):

Year Goods
exports
Goods
imports
Balance Services
exports
Services
imports
Interest Current
account
balance
Foreign
debt[16]
1970 1773 1694 79 424 437 223 -159 5171
1971 1740 1868 -128 457 459 256 -389 5564
1972 1941 1905 36 458 380 273 -223 6028
1973 3266 2235 1031 557 489 317 721 6429
1974 3931 3635 296 861 696 298 126 7628
1975 2961 3947 -985 743 571 460 -1284 7723
1976 3916 3033 883 836 564 465 667 9278
1977 5652 4162 1490 1117 730 370 1289 11445
1978 6400 3834 2566 1314 1414 405 1834 13276
1979 7810 6700 1110 1791 2553 493 -537 20950
1980 8021 10541 -2519 2744 3483 947 -4767 27157
1981 9143 9430 -287 2402 3107 2965 -4714 35657
1982 7625 5337 2288 1901 1858 4403 -2357 43634
1983 7836 4504 3332 1676 2017 4983 -2402 45069
1984 8107 4585 3523 1921 2125 5273 -2391 46171
1985 8396 3814 4582 1846 2077 4879 -953 49326
1986 6852 4724 2128 1865 2438 3934 -2858 51422
1987 6360 5818 542 2112 2397 3927 -4237 58324
1988 9135 5322 3813 2210 2465 4467 -1762 58303
1989 9579 4203 5376 2381 2646 5759 -1308 65511
1990 12353 4077 8276 2599 2978 5724 1764 62974
1991 11978 8275 3703 2736 3743 4828 -2735 65229
1992 12235 14872 -2637 2737 3855 3679 -8361 62972
1993 13118 16784 -3665 3127 4273 3608 -8153 72425
1994 15839 21590 -5751 3364 7143 4774 -10981 87524
1995 20963 20122 841 3826 7262 6375 -5104 101462
1996 23811 23762 49 4405 7952 7353 -6755 114423
1997 26431 30450 -4019 4599 8984 8826 -12116 129964
1998 26434 31377 -4944 4854 9298 10347 -14465 147634
1999 23309 25508 -2200 4719 8830 11329 -11910 152563
2000 26341 25280 1061 4936 9219 12352 -8955 155015
2001 26543 20320 6223 4627 8490 12162 -3780 166272
2002 25651 8990 16661 3495 4956 10414 8702 156813
2003 29939 13851 16088 4500 5693 9999 8073 164778
2004 34576 22445 12130 5288 6619 9909 3076 171473
2005 40387 28687 11700 6634 7626 6816 5055 114255
2006 46546 34154 12393 7911 8674 5322 6499 109504
2007 55980 44707 11273 10046 11027 5856 6049 125366
2008 70019 57462 12556 11424 13646 5722 5421 125859
2009 55672 38786 16886 10545 12537 4527 7254 119267
2010 68174 56793 11382 12817 14621 4820 -1623 134011
2011 82981 73961 9020 14497 17649 4960 -5340 145154
2012 79982 67974 12008 14247 18344 5077 -2138 145722
2013 75963 74442 1521 13680 19009 5058 -13124 141491
2014 68404 65736 2668 13396 18038 5431 -9179 144801
2015 56784 60203 -3419 13214 19029 5107 -17622 152632
2016 57909 55852 2057 13425 21876 7443 -15105 181432
2017 58645 66938 -8293 15506 25202 10904 -31151 234549
2018 61782 65483 -3701 15342 24277 16157 -27084 277827
2019 65115 49125 15990 14802 19646 17360 -3492 278489
2020 54884 42356 12528 9492 12028 6055 2688 270694
2021 77934 63184 14751 9499 13101 7135 6645 267004
2022 88446 81523 6923 14487 21396 8174 -3964 276473
2023 66789 73714 -6925 16532 22572 10773 -20751 283964
2024 79721 60822 18899 17167 22917 11568 5701 277257

[3][5][6][17][18][19][20]

Commercial relationships

Mercosur

Mercosur—the customs union that includes Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay—entered into force January 1, 1995; Bolivia, Chile, and Venezuela joined the pact subsequently as associate members. Cooperation between Brazil and Argentina (historic competitors) is the key to Mercosur's integration process, which includes political and military elements in addition to a customs union; Brazil accounts for 74% of Mercosur GDP and Argentina about 23%. Argentine intra-Mercosur trade rose dramatically from US$4 billion in 1991 to US$23 billion in 1998; it declined to US$9 billion during the 2002 crisis, but recovered quickly and reached US$44 billion in 2011 (28% of the Argentine total).[21] More than 90% of intra-Mercosur trade is duty-free, while the group's common external tariff (CET) applies to more than 85% of imported goods. Remaining goods will be phased into the CET by 2006.

Brazil's higher level of industrialization and production capacity, as well as other economic asymmetries, have been a source of tension with Argentina. Following the 2001-02 crisis, Argentina's recovering industrial sector has pressured the government to obtain restrictions (especially quotas) on Mercosur's free trade regulations, in order to protect their growth from what they see as disloyal competition from their larger partner to the north. Exports to Brazil helped lessen the impact of the crisis on the industrial sector somewhat, though Argentina's intra-Mercosur trade yielded it a cumulative US$15 billion deficit from 2004 to 2008. A renewed devaluation of the peso contributed to a US$700 million surplus with Mercosur in 2009, though deficits of US$1.8 billion were recorded in 2010 and 2011.[21]

Argentine trade with fellow Mercosur nations reached US$35 billion in 2022, and as in most years remained in deficit for Argentina with US$15.8 billion in exports and US$19.3 billion in imports. Mercosur buys 68% of Argentine exports of motor vehicles and auto parts, and these made up three-eights of total exports to the bloc in 2022.[22]

China

Trade with China was negligible until 1992; it later grew rapidly and by 2010, China became Argentina's second largest trading partner. Argentine exports to the Asian giant are mainly soy, beef, barley and, increasingly, lithium carbonate - while imports are mainly industrial and consumer goods.[8] Modest Argentine surpluses with China turned into deficits in 2008, however, and anti-dumping measures enacted subsequently triggered a Chinese boycott of its top Argentine import, soy oil, in 2010. Following trade negotiations, soy oil purchases from China resumed in 2011.[23]

Argentina's merchandise trade deficit with China has mostly grown since then, reaching US$9.5 billion on US$17.5 billion in imports by 2022; China is now Argentina's leading source of imports by nation, with 21.5%.[22]

These deficits have, in recent years, been partly financed by China itself by way of foreign exchange swaps. The two central banks first established these swap facilities in 2017, and expanded them to 130 billion yuan ($19.2 billion) in December 2018. In November 2022, Argentina and China agreed to add another 35 billion yuan (US$5.2 billion).[24]

China has become the largest investor in Argentina's growing lithium mining sector,[25] which by 2030 is projected by JPMorgan Chase to become the second-largest in the world - only behind Australia.[26]

United States

The United States replaced the United Kingdom in the 1920s as both the leading source of manufactures and of imports overall.[4] The U.S. share of imports and exports remained relatively stable at around 20% and 10%, respectively, until 2002; these proportions declined steadily afterward and by 2010, were approximately half the historical percentages. The U.S. has largely maintained a moderate trade surplus with Argentina, however.[27] This surplus reached US$3.7 billion in 1998. The Argentine crisis led to modest bilateral deficits for the U.S. in 2002-05 - but U.S. surpluses returned in 2006, growing to a record US$6.6 billion by 2014 before stabilizing.[28]

Petrochemicals, gold, silver, and aluminum are the leading Argentine exports to the U.S., and wine the leading Argentine consumer good in the U.S. market; Argentine imports are in turn mainly industrial.[29] Fresh Argentine beef was exported to the U.S. market in 1997 for the first time in over 60 years, and in 1999 its export quota of 20,000 tons was filled. Beef exports to the U.S. were suspended in August 2000 when Argentine cattle near the border with Paraguay (whose authorities refuse to vaccinate cattle against highly contagious hoof and mouth disease) were discovered to have anti-bodies for the infection. The quota was reinstated in early 2002 and has since averaged 28,000 tons.[30]

The Obama administration suspended Argentine participation in the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) in 2012, citing a failure to pay arbitration payments awarded by the World Bank's ICSID to a number of U.S. firms adversely impacted by the 2002 devaluation of the peso.[31] The GSP benefit (US$18 million in 2011) is relatively minimal, equaling 0.4% of Argentine exports to the U.S. of US$4.2 billion.[27]

U.S.-Argentine trade has nevertheless grown - albeit slowly - and Argentina remains one of a few countries with which the U.S. routinely maintains a merchandise trade surplus. Mutual trade reached nearly US$20 billion in 2022, with US$6.9 billion in U.S. imports from Argentina and US$13 billion in exports to Argentina.[28]

Trade in services with Argentina has been especially advantageous for the U.S., with Argentina's services deficit with the U.S. reaching US$5 billion in 2019[32] - the entirety for that year.[6]

European Union

Argentina has a thriving and longstanding trade relationship with the European Union, as well as close historic and cultural ties dating to the colonial era that spanned 300 years until independence in 1816.

European investment and immigration dramatically reshaped Argentina after 1880 - and the British Empire in particular dominated Argentine trade with over a third of the total until World War I, buying mainly meats and cereals in exchange for a wide variety of consumer and industrial goods.[4]

Argentine trade with Europe gradually declined in relation to other partner nations and regions. But the EU is still Argentina's third largest trading partner (after Brazil and China) and accounted for 13% of total Argentine trade in 2022, or US$22 billion - nearly balanced between exports to the EU (US$10.8 billion) and imports (US$11.1 billion).[22] Argentina's main exports to the EU are processed agricultural products (38%), chemical products (21%) and fish and seafood (8%). The EU exports to Argentina mainly manufactured products, such as machinery and appliances (28%) and chemical products, including pharmaceutical products (29%).

Trade in services, which was relatively stable until 2019, was temporarily affected during the COVID pandemic - to later rebound. In 2020, the EU imported services from Argentina worth 1.6 billion euros, while it exported services worth 3.5 billion euros.

Argentina is also an important investment destination for European companies, particularly Spain. The stock of investments from the EU was 35.8 billion euros in 2020, making the EU, as a bloc, the top foreign investor in the country. Some 21 EU member states have signed agreements for the promotion and reciprocal protection of investments with Argentina, and as of 2022, the European Investment Bank had a portfolio of loans amounting to € 655 million in Argentina (including loans under preparation).[33]

Intellectual property issues

Argentina adheres to most treaties and international agreements on intellectual property. It is a member of the World Intellectual Property Organization and signed the Uruguay Round agreements in December 1993, including measures related to intellectual property. However, extension of adequate patent protection to pharmaceuticals has been a highly contentious bilateral issue.

In May 1997, the U.S. suspended 50% of Argentina's GSP benefits because of its allegedly unsatisfactory pharmaceutical patent law. In May 1999, The U.S. Government initiated consultations under World Trade Organization procedures to address these inadequacies and expanded the consultations in May 2007.

Merchandise exports and imports

Foreign trade by type of product

Argentine foreign trade in 2024 by type of product (million US$):

Product class Exports Imports Balance
Meats, offal, and animals 3478 117 3369
Seafood 1969 42 1927
Dairy 1464 25 1439
Maize, wheat, and other cereals 10833 57 10776
Soybeans and other oilseeds 3183 3338 -155
Other crops 2169 843 1326
Vegetable oils 8057 116 7941
Fruit and vegetable preparations 1066 98 968
Wine and spirits 880 67 813
Animal fodder (mainly soy) 11435 85 11350
Tobacco 322 61 261
Other agricultural goods 1057 806 251
Fuel and lubricants 8203 3789 4414
Other minerals 644 841 -197
Pharmaceuticals 991 2487 -1496
Perfume and cosmetics 549 430 119
Fertilizers 36 1541 -1505
Cleansers, polish, etc. 160 424 -264
Other chemicals 2872 6224 -3352
Rubber and plastics 1128 3798 -2670
Leather, hides, and furs 431 152 279
Forestry products 627 1065 -438
Textiles, apparel, and footwear 391 1883 -1492
Glass, stone, ceramics, etc. 137 505 -368
Gold, silver, jewelry, and geodes 3341 86 3255
Iron and steel 1148 2152 -1004
Aluminum 1111 355 756
Other metals 61 1085 -1024
Machinery and parts 1369 15779 -14410
Motor vehicles and parts 8459 8959 -500
Aircraft and other transport equipment 52 206 -154
Precision equipment 111 1898 -1787
Other manufactures 1987 1508 479
Total 79721 60822 18899

[34]

Argentine exports by product category, since 1993 (million US$):

Category 1993-96 97-2000 2001-04 2005-08 2009-12 2013-16 2017-20 2021-24
Total Exports (annual) 18433 25629 29177 53233 71702 64765 60106 78332
Soy 2764 3639 6155 11872 16875 18338 16008 20579
Motor Vehicles & Parts 1300 2759 2144 5341 8850 7968 6477 8426
Oil, Gas,
Petrochemicals
2236 3630 5753 8219 7272 4393 4245 8372
Corn 743 1155 1110 2147 3598 4240 5104 8137
Beef & Leather 1782 1654 1422 2493 2398 2099 3209 3823
Gold & Silver 20 90 115 495 1907 1994 2637 3162
Wheat 986 1380 1307 2159 2333 1372 2713 3106
Fruit & Wine 622 885 892 1865 2479 2342 2337 2030
Fish & Seafood 841 901 849 1119 1324 1567 1932 1905
Sunflower 947 1123 662 1036 1043 654 787 1526
Barley 128 174 141 361 1054 1210 842 1273
Dairy 189 328 348 712 1081 1080 824 1266
Others 5875 7911 8279 15414 21488 17508 12991 14727

[35]

Foreign trade by leading export destinations

Argentine foreign trade in 2024 by leading export destinations, and chief exports and imports with each (million US$):

Partner Exports Imports Balance
Brazil 13608 14349 -741
United States 6453 6226 227
Chile 6323 727 5596
China 6053 11669 -5616
India 3933 1296 2637
Vietnam 3281 778 2503
Peru 2478 236 2242
Uruguay 1792 818 974
 Switzerland 1696 570 1126
Netherlands 1691 380 1311
Saudi Arabia 1493 94 1399
Spain 1446 997 449
Paraguay 1437 3314 -1877
Malaysia 1378 230 1148
Indonesia 1337 315 1022
South Korea 1233 511 722
Canada 1115 384 731
Italy 1083 1333 -250
Algeria 1012 131 881
Colombia 835 318 517
Germany 810 2656 -1846
Mexico 792 1424 -632
Poland 759 190 569
Ecuador 688 345 343
Bangladesh 688 26 662
United Kingdom 663 497 166
Rest of the world 15644 11008 4636
Total 79721 60822 18899

[34]

Exports by province

Argentine exports in 2024 by province and category (million US$):

Province Exports Per
capita
Growth
from 2010
Raw
materials
Agricultural
manufactures
Industrial Energy
Buenos Aires Province 29410 1674 28.6 5448 9439 11472 3051
Santa Fe 14730 4141 -0.8 1356 11716 1521 136
Córdoba 9976 2507 20.1 3984 4243 1727 23
Neuquén 3814 5246 1062.8 55 14 68 3676
Chubut 3511 5822 6.2 687 89 994 1741
Santa Cruz 2267 6787 40.2 316 55 1619 277
San Juan 1888 2308 -10.3 73 222 1594 0
Mendoza 1602 795 -5.5 218 1041 250 93
Entre Ríos 1424 998 -8.5 782 533 108 1
Santiago del Estero 1320 1252 183.9 1258 59 3 0
Salta 1281 889 26.5 835 90 318 38
Jujuy 1061 1329 182.9 465 169 426 0
La Pampa 1026 2803 257.5 777 211 5 33
Tucumán 954 560 4.3 219 359 373 3
San Luis 642 1187 19.1 288 213 141 0
 Río Negro 601 789 21.7 302 110 5 184
Misiones 442 345 -16.3 52 250 140 0
Tierra del Fuego 413 2162 5.6 60 12 42 299
Chaco 402 352 7.8 327 70 5 0
Buenos Aires 364 117 -2.9 0 37 326 0
Catamarca 340 791 -79.8 32 25 283 0
Corrientes 258 215 66.5 122 103 33 0
 La Rioja 219 569 -23.7 7 150 62 0
Formosa 37 61 2.8 32 5 0 0
Not classified by prov. 1740 n.a. -51.6 599 452 539 150
Total 79721 1731 17.0 18295 29669 22052 9705

[36]

References

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  11. ^ "Automotrices deberán exportar un dólar por cada dólar que importen". Tiempo Argentino. Archived from the original on July 24, 2011.
  12. ^ "Creció un 161% la producción de computadoras en 2011". Tiempo Argentino. Archived from the original on November 6, 2012.
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  14. ^ "En 2014, la maquinaria agrícola producirá casi el total de la demanda interna". Info News. Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved April 20, 2012.
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  16. ^ Includes private sector
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  23. ^ "China volvió a importar aceite de soja, pero el conflicto está lejos de resolverse". La Política Online.
  24. ^ "Argentina activates Chinese swap lines". Central Banking. January 10, 2023.
  25. ^ "China Increases Investment in Argentina, Eyes Lithium". Bloomberg. August 23, 2022.
  26. ^ "Argentina Poised to Be World's Third-Largest Lithium Producer by 2030, JPMorgan Says". February 15, 2023.
  27. ^ a b "Ministerio de Industria también rechazó la medida de EE.UU". Cronista Comercial. March 26, 2012.
  28. ^ a b "Trade in Goods with Argentina". U.S. Census Bureau.
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  30. ^ "AAEP" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved January 20, 2009.
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  33. ^ "The European Union and Argentina: Trade relations". Delegation of the European Union to Argentina. October 17, 2022.
  34. ^ a b "Argentine Foreign Trade Statistics: Preliminary data for 2024" (PDF). INDEC. February 2025.
  35. ^ "Exportaciones por complejos exportadores. Revisión 2018. Años 1993-2024". INDEC.
  36. ^ "Origen provincial de las exportaciones: 2024" (PDF). INDEC. March 2025.