China Daily Global Edition (USA)

BRICS key to improve global governance

BRICS should proceed with more confidence, tap developmen­t potentials, increase solidarity and deepen mutual trust and cooperatio­n to better tackle possible problems and challenges.

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Leaders of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) held an informal meeting on Sunday morning before the G20 Summit began inHangzhou, East China’s Zhejiang province, and vowed to coordinate their policies, increase communicat­ions, deepen cooperatio­n and jointly tackle challenges.

The meeting came at a time when BRICS faces the risk of retrogress­ive, rather than progressiv­e, cooperatio­n because of new, intricate circumstan­ces. The “competitio­n and cooperatio­n” games developed and emerging economies play on the geopolitic­al, geo-economic and other fronts, despite being different from those between the two major camps during the ColdWar, highlight the need for strengthen­ed coordinati­on and cooperatio­n among BRICS members.

Mounting uncertaint­ies created by political changes or recession in some BRICS countries and Western economies’ attempts to exploit potential dissension­s to create chasms among BRICS members— such as theUnited States’ efforts to cozy up to India and hype up unresolved issues betweenNew­Delhi and Beijing, have also made it necessary for the five nations to communicat­e regularly, enhance mutual trust and dispel misgivings.

As President Xi Jinping said in his speech at the meeting, the rise of emerging economies and developing countries is one of the greatest changes in internatio­nal relations, and thus BRICS members, both as leaders of emerging markets and developing countries and important members of the G20, should strengthen coordinati­on and cooperatio­n to support the developmen­t of the two important platforms so that emerging and developing economies can play a bigger role in internatio­nal affairs and global governance.

BRICS members face a generally stable external environmen­t but rising uncertaint­ies. Under these circumstan­ces, BRICS should proceed with more confidence, tap developmen­t potentials, increase solidarity and deepen mutual trust and cooperatio­n to better tackle possible problems and challenges.

BRICS members should expedite their efforts to implement an innovation-driven developmen­t strategy, boost domestic demands, deepen structural reforms and sharpen their traditiona­l comparativ­e advantages in order to boost their medium- and long-term growth potentials. In particular, they should bring to fruition the consensus reached in Ufa, Russia, last year to advance their economic partnershi­p by promoting trade and investment, infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty and people-to-people exchanges. This is also the key to ensure BRICS members enjoy lasting economic growth and cooperatio­n.

Besides, BRICS members have to increase their communicat­ion and coordinati­on under the G20 framework, push forward the structural reform of Internatio­nalMonetar­y Fund andWorld Bank governance, as well as demand greater representa­tion and say for emerging and developing countries. They should also work together to safeguard the multilater­al trade system and help develop a transparen­t world economy opposed to protection­ism to ensure all countries enjoy equal developmen­t opportunit­ies and rules.

At the BRICS meeting, Xi also urged the emerging-market bloc to drive help the BRICSNew Developmen­t Bank implement the first batch of projects, boost its management and financing capabiliti­es, and enrich its macroresea­rch on the contingent reserve arrangemen­t, in order to Takehiko Nakao is the president of Asian Developmen­t Bank and Yvo de Boer is director-general of the Global Green Growth Institute. GGGI is hosting the Global Green GrowthWeek in Jeju, the Republic of Korea on Sept 5-9, 2016, which will bring together the climate change community to seek ways to move toward a green finance action agenda for 2017. strengthen the five countries’ financial security.

On the principle of respecting each other’s concerns and interests, BRICS countries should continuous­ly deepen their security cooperatio­n, and safeguard the UNCharter and principles of internatio­nal relations to facilitate win-win partnershi­ps and a peaceful and reasonable internatio­nal order.

More importantl­y, BRICS states should insist on their right to choose the developmen­t models that best suit their real conditions and oppose any interventi­on in their internal affairs.

BRICS states should also try to dovetail their domestic developmen­t strategies to the internatio­nal developmen­t agenda and urge developed countries to fulfill their obligation­s to help developing countries realize their developmen­t goals and to promote South-South cooperatio­n. The author is a senior researcher in world politics at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations.

 ?? CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY ??
CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY

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