🔖 FGV EAESP | Inglês | 2026.1 | Questão 44 Comentada | 🏛️ B3GE™

FGV EAESP · Vestibular Unificado
Inglês · 2026.1
Questão Comentada · 44
Escola de Administração de Empresas de SP
1º Semestre · B3GE™

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📘 TEXT COMPREHENSION
Texto para responder às próximas três questões
TEXTO DE APOIO (clique para abrir / fechar)
WHAT’S HAPPENING TO COFFEE?
By Todd Carmichael

A good cup of coffee is an affordable luxury. Unfortunately, it’s becoming less affordable by the day.

In a major shift to U.S. trade policy, the Trump administration’s April 2nd “Liberation Day” tariff package has introduced import duties [tarifas] on raw coffee beans, a move that’s sparking [provocando] alarm in an industry already strained [sobrecarregada] by record-high prices.

In February 2025, the global price of arabica coffee reached US$4.41 per pound, the highest price in history, surpassing the spikes [picos] of 2011 and the Brazilian frost [geada] crisis of 1975. That milestone [marco] occurred before any tariffs were announced, and though the price has since receded, it remains at elevated levels. As of June 2025, a pound of roasted coffee cost U.S. customers nearly 13 percent more than it did a year earlier.

Now, with new duties added, a wave of panic is rippling [espalhando-se] through the global coffee trade. The United States is the world’s largest importer of raw coffee.

Coffee, much like bananas, is a tropical fruit. But coffee is even pickier [mais exigente]: it doesn’t need just the heat and humidity of the tropics; it can typically grow only at tropical altitudes. These conditions are found almost exclusively in a narrow band around the Equator, often referred to as the “coffee belt.” Within the United States, only a tiny fraction of land in Hawaii and Puerto Rico meets these requirements, making domestic coffee farming extremely limited.

Though some farmers are finding success growing coffee in the microclimate of Southern California, American labor costs and limited production keep California-grown coffee at a price point [faixa de preço] that most Americans simply cannot afford.

Despite that, the United States is the largest coffee-consuming nation in the world. And an enormous amount of work happens after the coffee leaves the farm: importing across oceans, processing and grading [classificação], transporting to roasters [torrefadores de café], roasting [torrefação] to bring out flavor, packaging, and finally preparing, selling, and serving it to millions of people every day. Coffee farming might start in the tropics, but the coffee industry inside U.S. borders is massive.

For decades, coffee entered the country duty-free, a recognition of its foundational role in a U.S. industry that supports more than 1.7 million American jobs. That exemption is now gone. In April, the Trump administration implemented a 10 percent baseline tariff on nearly all imported coffee. This month, it raised tariffs on dozens of trading partners, with coffee-producing nations India, Indonesia and Vietnam facing sharply higher rates. Coffee from countries with strong trade agreements with the U.S., including Mexico and Colombia, remains exempt, for the most part. Yet Brazil, the world’s largest producer of coffee, was slapped last week with a 50 percent tariff. Brazil provides about 30 percent of the coffee consumed in the United States, so this will massively impact both coffee prices and the industry within U.S. borders.

🔗 Texto adaptado de:. The Washington Post, August 11, 2025 .
📘 QUESTION
44

QUESTÃO

According to the information in the article, which of the following is most likely, at least partially, a result of Donald Trump’s new tariff package

A

Americans will finally start relying on domestically produced coffee.

B

More than a million workers in the U.S. coffee industry will lose their jobs.

C

Data shows that in June 2025, coffee in the U.S. was more than 10 percent higher than it was in June 2024.

D

Even coffee producers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and Southern California will face serious financial difficulties.

E

Many companies involved in the global coffee trade will face bankruptcy.

📘 ANSWER KEY
🔐 Gabarito (clique para revelar)
Gabarito: C
📘 DETAILED SOLUTION
🧠 QUESTÃO COMENTADA | PADRÃO B3GE™ | Língua Inglesa | Q.44

🧭 Leitura orientada

A questão pede identificar o efeito que pode ser ao menos parcialmente atribuído ao novo pacote tarifário anunciado pelo governo Trump, com base nos dados apresentados no texto.

🔍 Identificação das informações-chave

O artigo informa que, em junho de 2025, o preço do café torrado nos Estados Unidos estava cerca de 13% mais alto do que no mesmo período do ano anterior. Também esclarece que os preços já vinham elevados antes das tarifas, mas que a introdução de novos impostos de importação contribuiu para a manutenção e intensificação desses aumentos.

🧠 Núcleo de sentido

Ainda que o aumento dos preços não seja causado exclusivamente pelas tarifas, o texto deixa claro que elas ajudam a explicar a elevação observada no período recente, o que sustenta a alternativa correta.

🔍 Análise alternativa por alternativa (com pegadinhas)

(A) ❌ Errada
Pegadinha: o texto afirma que a produção doméstica é limitada e cara, não indicando substituição do consumo por café nacional.


(B) ❌ Errada
Pegadinha: embora o setor empregue milhões, o texto não menciona demissões em massa como consequência das tarifas.


(C) ✅ Correta — GABARITO
O texto afirma que, em junho de 2025, o café custava quase 13% a mais do que um ano antes, aumento que pode ser atribuído, ao menos em parte, à introdução das novas tarifas.


(D) ❌ Errada
Pegadinha: não há indicação de dificuldades financeiras graves para produtores domésticos específicos.


(E) ❌ Errada
Pegadinha: o texto menciona preocupação e pânico, mas não prevê falências generalizadas.


🧠 Resumo B3GE™ Master

✔ Tarifas não são a única causa do aumento de preços.
✔ Contribuem para manter o café em patamar elevado.
✔ Dado percentual sustenta a alternativa correta.

🔎 Gabarito confirmado: (C)