Rio de Janeiro: The chattering line of Brazilians, many straining under the weight of their duty-free bags, stretched back hundreds of feet after a recent Monday-night flight from Buenos Aires to Rio de Janeiro.
Backed by a booming economy, record job creation and a strong currency, Brazilian consumers are taking wing as they go on a spending spree from street markets in the Argentine capital to shopping malls in Florida and Chile's ski slopes.
Engine of growth
The consumption power of Brazil's burgeoning middle class has already helped make the Latin American giant one of the world's few engines of growth, propelling its economy at a nine per cent annual pace in the first three months of 2010.
Frenzied shopping is the norm for Brazilian tourists abroad, who face some of the world's highest prices at home thanks to heavy import taxes.
These days their clout is being felt in foreign climes, helped by better access to credit and deals that allow travellers to pay in 10 or more instalments.
"They're buying everything in this mall," laughed 54-year-old Brazilian Gilvania Venancio as she watched about 20 of her relatives roam through shops in Buenos Aires last weekend, buying everything from leather jackets to perfumes.
Brazilian tourists spent $8.6 billion (Dh31.6 billion) abroad in the first seven months of 2010, a 56 per cent rise on the year before, according to central bank figures released last month.
The record $1.5 billion they spent abroad in July contributed heavily to a near tripling of Brazil's current account deficit from a year ago to $4.5 billion. That makes them part of a brewing headache for the country's policymakers, because the widening of the deficit tends to raise vulnerability to foreign capital flows that fund the gap.
For an idea of where the money is flowing, visit the huge Aventura shopping mall in Miami. The mall, one of the biggest in the United States with about 24 million shoppers a year, saw a 30 per cent rise in the number of Brazilian visitors in the first seven months of this year.
"When I leave the office there will be four buses [of Brazilians] leaving in front of me," said Crystal Rouhani, the mall's tourism director.
"We have a great mix of other major markets but this year especially Brazil has been in full force."
So much so that Rouhani now plans on making two trips a year to Brazil to meet tour operators, up from one before.
Big spenders
Each Brazilian spends an average of more than $850 on a visit to the Aventura mall, four times more than Americans.
Brazilian visitors to Florida surged 29 per cent last year to 712,000 and their spending jumped 36 per cent, even as overall visitors to the US Sunshine State dipped one per cent, according to the Visit Florida travel marketing agency. They overtook Britons as the second-biggest visitors to Florida in the first quarter of this year and spent more than double.
Brazilian tour firm CVC, which sends 300 Brazilians to Buenos Aires every day, says many of its customers are making their first foray abroad. Demand for its World for Brazilians packages, which include a guide and interpreter for groups, has nearly tripled this year.