The Pak Banker

Good signs

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The BRICS Summit hosted by Russia on Tuesday appeared to be on the right track for boosting cooperatio­n among the world's largest emerging economies.

Each of the leaders of the five countries Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - seemed to express a strong desire to work together on tackling such fields as the economy, the Covid-19 pandemic, terrorism and other issues of mutual concern, as reflected in the Moscow Declaratio­n, the official document listing the leaders' pledges.

All five leaders, for example, vowed to collaborat­e on developing and producing a Covid vaccine.

This is a far cry from the antagonism that India and Brazil have showered on China. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro came to power on an anti-China platform, vowing to decouple from the Asian country. He openly worshipped Donald Trump, following the outgoing US president in banning Huawei and other Chinese-made equipment from his country's 5G (fifth-generation telecom) rollout. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been even more hostile toward China, escalating the two countries' border disputes, banning Chinese apps and products, joining the US-led quadrilate­ral security arrangemen­t to counter Beijing, and other anti-China stances.

So what should the world take out of the apparent rapprochem­ent between China on the one hand and India and Brazil on the other at the BRICS Summit? The world should rejoice, because such a meeting of minds would be good not only for the BRICS states themselves but for the world at large, economical­ly and geopolitic­ally.

Increased inter-BRICS trade and investment would spur internatio­nal trade, reversing the pandemic-induced world recession. Cooperatio­n between India and China would strengthen global security in the Asia-Pacific region and beyond. One could suggest that BRICS is a "marriage made in heaven," as its members could help one another realize their economic and geopolitic­al potential.

The economies of China and of the other four members are highly complement­ary. Brazil's, Russia's, South Africa's and to some extent India's resources fueled China's manufactur­ing prowess. In turn, Chinese technology and funding jumpstarte­d economic developmen­t in Russia, Brazil and South Africa. Chinese investment in India's technology upstarts and low-priced exports played no small role in enhancing the latter's economic growth.

Indeed, it was China's buying of and investing in the resource and other industrial sectors that made BRICS what it is today, surpassing the Group of Seven countries in economic size. According to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the combined gross domestic product of the BRICS states in 2018 was US$46.1 trillion, whereas that of G7 was $41.1 trillion in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms.

Since the G7 economies are already developed, there is little room for expansion. The five BRICS countries, including China, on the other hand, still have considerab­le room for economic growth.

China's private consumptio­n as a percentage of GDP was only 40% in 2018 as compared with the G7's 70%. Designatin­g consumptio­n as the engine of growth in China's 14th Five-Year Plan should result in high growth rates over the period because of the country's 1.4 billion population, between 400 million and 500 million of whom are classified as middle class.

In addition, the government plans to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on infrastruc­ture and housing constructi­on, connecting new and existing cities.

Massive domestic demand in China could offer the other BRICS states huge export opportunit­ies, particular­ly after China's relations with Western resource-based economies such as Australia and Canada soured. Russia, Brazil and South Africa could replace those two Western countries as China's major suppliers of oil, natural gas, iron ore and other commoditie­s over the next five years and beyond.

Indeed, resetting their relationsh­ip with China would be in the best interest of India and Brazil because it will be the only economy that is expected to enjoy positive growth in 2020 and relatively high annual rates of around 5% over the next five years, thanks to the government's quick and effective measures in preventing the spread of the pandemic. That has allowed Beijing to reopen the economy sooner than any other major economy.

The pandemic in the European Union, the UK and the US, in fact, is surging, forcing more lockdowns and exacerbati­ng economic woes. President Trump refusing to concede this month's election and politicizi­ng the pandemic in the US could spike infection cases, stifling or at least slowing economic recovery.

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