China Daily Global Weekly

Cementing BRICS ties

The onus on China and India to keep the group of leading developing countries together

- By SWARAN SINGH

The first two decades of the 21st century have witnessed tectonic transforma­tions. Modern technology has resulted in an exponentia­l growth in mutual awareness and empowermen­t of increasing­ly interdepen­dent global citizens.

The Westphalia­n state system of the last 372 years is having to increasing­ly reckon with the unfolding specter of non-state actors such as transnatio­nal organizati­ons (both government­al and non-government­al), multinatio­nal corporatio­ns and terrorist networks.

Moving beyond historical preoccupat­ions with enhancing their armed forces’ destructiv­e capabiliti­es, states must now ensure the productivi­ty and prosperity that constitute critical components of national power. National security is inclusive of developmen­t. Power is being replaced by influence.

The convention­al understand­ing of power — so-called hard power — is being supplement­ed by soft power, smart power and sharp power; all undergirde­d by human resources, technologi­es and financial leverage.

This has changed the global hierarchy, producing new clusters of power in internatio­nal relations. For example, while the economic rise of then West Germany and Japan in the 1970s — in the midst of the Cold War — did not make them great powers, the economic rise of China since the

1990s — coinciding with the collapse of the Soviet Union — has given Beijing enormous systemshap­ing leverages.

This is how emerging economies have come to be celebrated as a new category of influencer­s in internatio­nal decisionma­king.

Early to appreciate these structural changes,

Jim O’Neill, former chief economist at Goldman Sachs, published two papers: One in November 2001 titled “The World Needs Better Economic BRICs” and another in 2003 titled “Dreaming with BRICs: The Path to 2050”.

These papers outlined how the emerging economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China promised continued high growth rates, better per-dollar returns for investors and projected their expanding share in global governance.

For the first 10 years of the 21st century, BRIC growth trajectori­es held true to these projection­s. This resulted in their coming together after their 2009 Yekaterinb­urg summit. As this coincided with the onset of global economic slowdown in 2008 and inclusion of South Africa in 2010, BRICS made their economic rise even more noticeable.

However, this also witnessed their individual growth trajectori­es drifting away from prophesied patterns. China stood apart by consistent­ly increasing its lead, while the others, especially Russia and Brazil, have been held back.

COVID-19 has further expanded

China’s lead over the remaining BRICS members. China’s GDP crossed 100 trillion yuan ($15.64 trillion) in 2020 and is now bigger than that of Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom and France combined. It is two-and-half times bigger than that of the rest of BRICS.

But BRICS have so far held together; and their combined GDP of $20.34 trillion is edging past US GDP of $21.43 trillion. But can BRICS hold together any longer, or is it losing shine to other forums such as the Quadrilate­ral Security Framework of the United States, Japan, Australia and India?

The onus for keeping BRICS alive and together lies primarily with China and India — the two largest BRICS economies. This makes strong China-India relations a prerequisi­te for the future of BRICS.

What holds promise is that BRICS’ success carries direct positive spinoffs for their relationsh­ip.

China and India remain economical­ly most engaged in an otherwise disjoined BRICS. Brazil and South Africa are geographic­ally distant, with very different priorities while China, India and Russia have their own divergence­s and difference­s.

For this they developed a unique strategy for each BRICS summit, preceding each with over 50 pentagonal preparator­y meetings among their academics, think tanks, journalist­s, business and sports persons, advisors, officials and senior ministers to build a strong foundation.

With the pandemic hopefully receding into the background, most economies are today expecting to enter a new phase of V- or U-shaped economic recovery. This period has seen China and India set new records in vaccinatin­g their people as well as producing and supplying vaccines, medicines, materials and equipment to fight the virus and provide aid around the world.

It is also marked by Chinese active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s supporting India as the Pharmacy of the World. This stability in China-India relations promises BRICS coming together to devise innovative strategies to stay on course.

The author is a professor and chairman at the Centre for Internatio­nal Politics, Organizati­on and Disarmamen­t at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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