The U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) announced the duties following a Section 301 investigation into Brazil’s digital economy. Washington contends that policies favoring Pix, which the Central Bank of Brazil launched in 2020, unfairly disadvantage American electronic payment firms. While the USTR stopped short of placing a direct tariff on the payment infrastructure itself, it included electronic payment regulations among the core justifications for the sweeping trade penalties scheduled to take effect on July 22.
Pix has fundamentally altered the Brazilian financial landscape, processing 63 billion transactions worth BRL 26.4 trillion in 2024 alone. However, the system now exists alongside a surging market for dollar-linked stablecoins, which account for roughly 90% of reported cryptocurrency flows in the country. This creates a complex regulatory environment where domestic payments rely on Pix, yet individual and commercial demand for digital dollars remains robust.
Brazilian authorities are simultaneously working to insulate official foreign-exchange channels from crypto-volatility. Under Resolution BCB No. 561, regulators have barred virtual assets from settling payments within regulated eFX providers, effectively drawing a perimeter between private blockchain usage and supervised international settlements. These domestic policies coincide with Brazil’s recent push during its 2025 BRICS presidency to explore alternative blockchain infrastructure, further complicating the country’s trade relationship with Washington as it navigates a shifting digital financial landscape.

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