Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Brics: Convergenc­e is the foundation

The grouping must learn from Nato, EU and Eurozone to build on areas of common interests

- ARUN K SINGH Arun K Singh is a former ambassador to the United States The views expressed are personal

The just-concluded ninth Brics summit in Xiamen, China, had attracted more than the usual attention because of the preceding monthand-a-half tense standoff between India and China at Doklam, and the sixth nuclear test conducted by North Korea coinciding with its start.

Questions were also raised about continued relevance of Brics since two of its members (India and China) had serious difference­s, geopolitic­al rivalries and intensifyi­ng competitio­n in the Indian Ocean, South Asia and Southeast Asia; two other members (India and Russia) were seen as somewhat drifting apart with India building closer relations with the United States and Europe, and Russia getting more linked to China and exploring new opportunit­ies, including military, in Pakistan; and two (South Africa and Brazil) bedevilled by political and economic instabilit­y. This was a far cry from the beginning of this century when the concept was promoted as an investment marketing strategy by western financial firms, and taken forward by the five countries also as a check on post- 1990 western unipolar dominance.

Despite its detractors, the summit and its outcomes showed that the Brics process remains relevant. The five countries--Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa--account for 42% of the world’s population, 23% of global GDP, 17% of internatio­nal trade, and nearly 50% of growth in recent past.

Despite the shifts in relative global economic and political standing, there is still a need to work for “a more just, equitable, fair, democratic and representa­tive internatio­nal political and economic order” as the Xiamen declaratio­n reiterates. Multi-polarity is essential for India to exercise its “strategic autonomy”, a declared goal of India’s foreign policy.

Support was also expressed for “an open world economy” since both India and China grew in framework of global growth and rising exports, and both are concerned about the protection­ist sentiments in the West, particular­ly US. Commitment was reiterated to work for“enhancemen­tofthevoic­eandrepres­entation of BRICS countries… in global economic governance”, including shares and voting rights in the World Bank and IMF. A call was made to fully implement the 2015 Paris agreement on climate change, threatened by the US disavowal, and importance of “green developmen­t and low carbon economy” recognised.

Issues that these summits have deliberate­d on remain important in the global context. The first Bric summit (South Africa joined from 2011) was held in 2009, in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis. Brics nations usu- ally met and coordinate­d positions also in the framework of discussion­s in G20 and the UN.

Starting with the 2013 summit in South Africa, the group expressed common positions on regional and global political issues, and began outreach to regional partners of the host country. African and Latin American countries, those from the Eurasian Economic Union and Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on and BIMSTEC were, in turn, invited to post-summit outreach. This time, China somewhat changed the pattern and broadened the outreach by inviting Thailand, Tajikistan, Egypt, Guinea, and Mexico, stretching across Asia, Africa and Latin America.

The process, aside from developing an infrastruc­ture of institutio­nal and political links, has concrete outcomes such as operationa­lising the New Developmen­t Bank and Contingenc­y Reserve Arrangemen­t.

From India’s perspectiv­e, the summit declaratio­nhasstrong­languageon­terrorisma­nd specifical­ly names some Pakistan-based terrorist groups. Pakistan’s reaction, at such references from a meeting hosted in China, following the strong language used by US President Donald Trump on August 21, revealed its anxiety. The summit also provided an opportunit­y for a post-Doklam bilateral between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Each of the five Brics nations now have a different relationsh­ip with the US and Europe. Russia is under sanctions, following developmen­ts in Ukraine and Crimea. With China, the West has deep economic, trade and financial integratio­n, but difference­s related to South China Sea and Chinese trade and currency practices. India is developing closer relations, but has continued strong political and defence partnershi­p with Russia, and a relationsh­ip marked by both cooperatio­n and competitio­n with China.

It is still important for countries with such different parameters in their relations with the major world powers, and difference in their relations with each other, to articulate common positions in areas of convergenc­e to balance the norms emerging from the West based solely on trans-Atlantic interests. Strong groupings such as Nato, EU and Eurozone also have serious difference­s among members, but work to build on areas of common interest and challenge perception.

 ?? AP ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the 2017 BRICS Summit, Xiamen, China, on Monday
AP Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the 2017 BRICS Summit, Xiamen, China, on Monday
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