Date : 02/06/2023
Relevance – GS Paper 2 - International Relations - Regional organizations and summits
Key Words – Multipolarity, Multilateralism, Substainable development
Context –
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar is in Cape Town, South Africa, to attend a meeting of the foreign ministers of BRICS — a grouping comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, which is seen as the closest that the ‘Global South’ has come to organising itself as a collective to challenge a western global narrative.
About BRICS
BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) is an important grouping bringing together the major emerging economies of the world. In 2006, the concept, itself, gave rise to the grouping, incorporated into Brazil, Russia, India and China's foreign policy. In 2011, on the occasion of the Third Summit, South Africa became part of the group, who adopted the acronym BRICS.
It comprises of (According to World Bank data of 2019):
- 41% of the world population,
- having 24% of the world GDP and
- over 16% share in the world trade
About 15th BRICS summit –
- The foreign ministers’ meeting will finalise the agenda for the 15th BRICS summit scheduled to be held in South Africa in August.
- Two items on the agenda are attracting notice for their potential for a greater geopolitical consolidation of the grouping:
- a plan to expand the membership of BRICS,
- and a common currency.
- South Africa, which is in the chair this year, is hosting a Friends of BRICS meeting on Friday, with 15 foreign ministers from Africa and the Global South.
Looking for multipolarity –
- As many as 19 countries are said to be in the queue to join BRICS. Among the countries that have been mentioned frequently since last year: Argentina, Nicaragua, Mexico, Uruguay, Venezuela from Latin America; Nigeria, Algeria, Egypt, Senegal, Morocco from Africa; Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Türkiye, Syria, Iran from West Asia; Kazakhstan from Central Asia; Bangladesh and Afghanistan from South Asia; and Indonesia and Thailand from South-east Asia.
- It is not clear which countries might be admitted, but any expansion can be seen as strengthening the group’s heft as a spokesperson of the developing world. By admitting some key countries in the list, BRICS could lay claim to representing more than half the world’s population. Significantly, the list includes big oil producers Saudi, Iran, the UAE, Nigeria, and Venezuela.
- It is said that the rush towards BRICS is driven by two basic impulses: “First, there is considerable anti-US sentiment in the world, and all these countries are looking for a grouping where they can use that sentiment to gather together. Second, there is a lot of appetite for multipolarity, for a platform where countries of the Global South can express their solidarity.”
Chinese stand in BRICS
- The idea of BRICS came between 2001 and 2003 from then Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill, who projected that the four emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India, and China would be the future economic powerhouses of the world, with South Africa being added later.
- While the economic performance of BRICS has been mixed, the war in Ukraine — which has brought the West together on the one hand and strengthened the China-Russia partnership on the other — has turned it into an aspiring bloc that appears to be challenging the western geopolitical view.
- China is driving the expansion of the group. After a meeting of BRICS officials in February, China’s foreign office said “membership expansion has become part of the core agenda of BRICS”, but sought to dispel the impression that this was intended to create a bloc.
- “Rather, it is for the purpose of creating a bigger living space for the Global South,” the statement said — and quoted South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa’s view that BRICS was about allowing the “voices of the marginalised to actually be heard”.
- Significantly, China does not use the word multipolarity — instead using “multilateralism” whenever it hits out at “US hegemony”. The theme of BRICS 2023 is: “BRICS and Africa: Partnership for Mutually Accelerated Growth, Sustainable Development, and Inclusive Multilateralism”.
Multipolarity Vs Multilateralism
Multipolarity refers to the distribution of power among multiple major actors in international relations, while multilateralism refers to a cooperative approach involving the participation of multiple states in decision-making. Multipolarity relates to power structure, while multilateralism relates to the process of cooperation.
India in BRICS
- If India’s presence at the G7 summit in Hiroshima, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi also participated in an informal Quad summit, was seen as a sign of New Delhi’s US tilt, the importance it attaches to the “anti-West” BRICS is an apparent contradiction — much like the several others it has negotiated through the last year.
- Indian diplomats are clearing it out that India should not be seen as ganging up with an anti-West coalition. A lot of countries are misunderstanding this. India is also part of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), and despite problems, it has relations with Russia, with China. While China does want BRICS to be an anti-western group, the Indian view is that it is a “non-western” group and should stay that way.
- Some analysts see BRICS as an improbable grouping, with hostiles like India and China unlikely to ever find common ground — a situation that could get pronounced as it adds members. One view on the expanding membership is that it could sideline India’s role in the group.
Common currency
- The idea of a common currency was proposed by Russia’s President Vladimir Putin at the Beijing BRICS summit last year. The idea got a cautious reception, with the leaders deciding to set up a committee to study its viability.
- There are other complications, such as the setting up of a common central bank of member countries that have different economic and political systems and are located on different continents.
- An option is for members to trade with each other in their respective currencies — but as the India-Russia example has shown, this is not easy either. Moscow wants payments in dollars because it does not import enough from India to use rupee payments. Negotiations are stuck.
- Asked if India was on board with the idea of a common currency, Jaishankar told a press conference in Mozambique in April: “Individual countries have their own position on the matter.”
- China has hit out against the “hegemony of the US dollar” as the source of all instability in the world, and is already trying to push the yuan as a trading currency in Central Asia. But there is no evidence that it is ready to dump the dollar yet.
Probable Questions for Mains Examination
- Question 1: Adopting a common currency for BRICS nation could be a tactical move countering west and strengthening an alternative front. Analyse this statement in light of agendas of upcoming BRICS summit. (10 Marks)
- Question 2: What do you think by Multipolarity? Why world is witnessing a shift toward Multilateralism? Give Your answer in context of upcoming BRICS summit. (15 Marks)
Source – The Indian Express