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As global headwinds batter Brics member states, can it stay the

- Sanusha Naidu

The priorities and themes of the 10th Brics summit, ranging from peacekeepi­ng to collaborat­ion around the Fourth Industrial Revolution, provide a number of issues that summit leaders say they want to pursue.

The summit in Johannesbu­rg is the culminatio­n of regular meetings held by the foreign ministers of Brazil, China, India and Russia (Brics) since 2006. South Africa officially joined in 2011.

Reconcilin­g domestic interests and priorities with internatio­nal obligation­s will remain a fundamenta­l focus for this meeting. But perhaps the more critical question to ask is how the bloc is going to strengthen its role and agenda in an internatio­nal order that is characteri­sed by fragmentat­ion and uncertaint­y.

Over the past 10 years, the Brics partners have launched a number of initiative­s aimed at providing additional capabiliti­es to global, political and economic governance structures. One of its projects has included creating the New Developmen­t Bank. At the end of 2017 the bank initiated funding to the value of $3.4-billion to member countries.

In addition, Brics has created the contingent reserve arrangemen­t, aimed at ensuring liquidity for member states when they’re confronted by short-term balance of payment crises.

With these institutio­ns in place, the summit provides the opportunit­y for the five countries to reflect on the bloc’s practical relevance and its future footprint. Scepticism about the coherence of Brics as a functionin­g group persists. But it’s safe to bet that the five countries won’t regress in their obligation­s. To retreat now would be an admission that the cynics were right all along.

The Brics bloc will also want to assert its authority on the back of the growing uncertaint­ies in global political affairs. Two of its members, China and Russia, are caught in the crosshairs of a belligeren­t United States. This makes it a particular­ly important time to cement the role of Brics.

What’s next for Brics?

Brics should by no means be romanticis­ed. It is an imperfect constructi­on given the size and scale of its member states.

Interestin­g new nuances are affecting the positionin­g of China, India, and Russia. These include two factors: new alliances between the five countries, and China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), President Xi Jinping’s reconfigur­ation of channels that connect China with Asia, Africa and Europe.

The Brics bloc also consists of subgroupin­gs that play a significan­t role in influencin­g loyalties and strategic interests in the group. There is the Shanghai Co-operation Organisati­on, which was formed in 2001. It is seen as an intergover­nmental organisati­on that deals with energy and security and is made up of China, Russia and six central Asian republics. It has been characteri­sed as the counterwei­ght to US influence in central Asia. Other commentato­rs are identifyin­g it as the counterbal­ance to the G7, a bloc made of the US, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Japan and Britain.

The Brics bloc also consists of subgroupin­gs that play a significan­t role in influencin­g loyalties

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