• Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Economy
The Significant Deals
Editor's Pick

Spurred by shared grievances, BRICS gathers pace

by October 25, 2024
written by October 25, 2024

(This Oct. 24 story has been refiled to fix a typo in reporting credits and to replace the quote that was wrongly attributed to Shi Yinhong in paragraph 20)

By Mark John and Libby George

LONDON (Reuters) – As U.S. election jitters hung over this week’s meeting of global finance chiefs in Washington, a smiling Vladimir Putin was in the Russian city of Kazan welcoming leaders of countries which together make up nearly half the world’s population.

The BRICS club of emerging economies may be a long way from rivalling the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or challenging U.S. dollar dominance. But the first summit with its new batch of members showed clear signs of its growing weight.

The final communique was long on words and short on detail about creating new payment and trade mechanisms which could by-pass Western-dominated structures – including, notably in Russia’s case, sanctions imposed after its invasion of Ukraine.

But the summit scored a series of diplomatic wins: the presence of U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and of Tayyip Erdogan, president of NATO member Turkey, which has expressed interest in joining the BRICS group. India and China chose the summit to profile new efforts to nurture ties. 

For Putin, the simple fact that so many leaders travelled to Russia for the talks was useful in countering the narrative that his country faces isolation from the global economy.

“They (Western capitals) are not getting the importance of this thing,” said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, a senior fellow at the Bruegel economic think tank. “It’s all signalling that the West is losing power.”

Kazan may not go on to occupy the same place in history as Bretton Woods, the New Hampshire town where 80 years ago the victors of World War Two fashioned a monetary order that would dominate the global economy and consolidate dollar supremacy.

However this week’s talks underlined dissatisfaction with a system seen under-serving much of the world, with a collapse in capital transfers to developing economies over the past decade and emerging countries under-represented in IMF decision-making.

“See how many people are scrambling to apply to join the BRICS,” Mo Ibrahim, a Sudanese-British businessman who runs a foundation that tracks governance in Africa, told Reuters. Putin has said that more than 30 countries have applied.      

“People see institutions which are not really representative or democratic – infrastructure established in 1945 or so after the world war, and nothing changes,” added Ibrahim.

The club’s track record has been mixed since Brazil, Russia, India and China launched it in 2006. For one thing, its creation has not yet altered the earlier growth-per-capita path of those four founding nations, calculated Mario Holzner of the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw).

Moreover, the $5 billion in loans which the BRICS’ New Development Bank (NDB) expects to make this year pales next to the $72.8 billion distributed by the World Bank in credits, loans and grants. Other projects remain in their infancy.

“They might be able to establish some kind of money transfer systems which at least on a low level will work but that most likely won’t really be a game-changer,” said Holzner.

HEDGING BETS

Many commentators also note that as the group grows, imbalances in size and influence among member countries and sometimes duelling national agendas will make consensus-building on joint initiatives harder.

But those queuing up to join see it as a de facto trade forum – already accounting for a fifth of global commerce. 

“There is a huge upside in sort of linking these corridors,” Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb told Reuters on the sidelines of the IMF meeting in Washington. “So indeed, we are keen to become a member of BRICS.”

While most observers doubt BRICS’ pact to launch its own payment system will challenge the dollar’s supremacy any time soon, such initiatives appeal to countries who fear their own policies might one day draw Western sanctions.

“You’re kind of geopolitically cushioning yourself against future friction with the West by coming up with this alternative structure,” said Hamish Kinnear, a senior analyst at global risk intelligence firm Verisk (NASDAQ:VRSK) Maplecroft, who described BRICS as “the signal and not the cause of the changing world order”.

Indeed, rather than an outright alternative to the IMF, as some have ventured, many BRICS members and aspirant joiners view it opportunistically as a vehicle for hedging bets in a world facing geopolitical change.

“BRICS is (for China) not a strategic and economic coalition,” said Shi Yinhong, Professor at the School of International Studies at Renmin University of China, noting many BRICS members are also nurturing their ties with the West.

This post appeared first on investing.com
0 comment
0
FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

previous post
Italy’s Eni to boost buyback after quarterly earnings beat expectations
next post
Reserve Bank of Australia reports $2.8 billion accounting loss for 2024

You may also like

China central bank conducts 1.7 trln yuan of...

January 27, 2025

Fuji Media, rocked by sexual misconduct allegations, says...

January 27, 2025

ECB president fears loss of central bank independence

January 27, 2025

European tech shares tumble as China’s AI push...

January 27, 2025

Futures slip as investors eye China’s latest AI...

January 27, 2025

Markets may be repeating the mistake of 2019,...

January 27, 2025

How billionaire Caltagirone could influence Italy’s banking M&A...

January 27, 2025

How Italy’s MPS went from near collapse to...

January 27, 2025

Analysis-To weather Trump, emerging market investors look to...

January 27, 2025

Chinese AI startup DeepSeek overtakes ChatGPT on Apple...

January 27, 2025
Fill Out & Get More Relevant News








    Stay ahead of the market and unlock exclusive trading insights & timely news. We value your privacy - your information is secure, and you can unsubscribe anytime. Gain an edge with hand-picked trading opportunities, stay informed with market-moving updates, and learn from expert tips & strategies.

    Recent Posts

    • Netflix says its ad tier now has 94 million monthly active users

      May 15, 2025
    • Dick’s Sporting Goods to buy struggling Foot Locker for $2.4 billion

      May 15, 2025
    • YouTube will stream NFL Week 1 game in Brazil for free

      May 15, 2025
    • 5 new Uber features you should know — including a way to avoid surge pricing

      May 15, 2025

    Categories

    • Economy (245)
    • Editor's Pick (3,646)
    • Investing (463)
    • Stock (6,426)

    Latest News

    • Netflix says its ad tier now has 94 million monthly active users
    • Dick’s Sporting Goods to buy struggling Foot Locker for $2.4 billion

    Popular News

    • FCC reinstates complaints over ABC presidential debate, Harris TV appearances
    • Analysis-Bond vigilantes spare France for now, but political crisis will bring more pain

    About The Significant deals

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 thesignificantdeals.com | All Rights Reserved

    The Significant Deals
    • Investing
    • Stock
    • Editor’s Pick
    • Economy