China Daily Global Edition (USA)

BRICS a powerful force against US protection­ism

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The invitation to the leaders of 22 emerging and developing countries, including 19 from Africa, made the just concluded BRICS summit in Johannesbu­rg an even more important platform to demonstrat­e that the developing world and emerging economies as a whole, along with many developed economies, are strongly opposed to the Donald Trump administra­tion’s trade protection­ist policies and punitive tariffs on imports.

The US administra­tion has imposed high tariffs on imports from many economies, especially China, to push forward Trump’s “America first” strategy. Some economies, China, India, and Russia in particular, have been forced to impose additional tariffs on US imports in response. And Brazil is worried about the US tariffs, on its steel products, even though its farmers may benefit from increased export of agricultur­al products to China.

A number of South African companies producing steel for the US market, including ArcelorMit­tal South Africa, the world’s leading integrated steel and mining company, and Hulamin, an enterprise that supplies aluminum products for Elon Musk’s Tesla vehicles, are also deeply worried about the US tariffs.

Also, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund recently warned that the high US tariffs and tit-for-tat response from its trade partners could knock 0.5 percentage points off global growth by 2020. But the Trump administra­tion has all but ignored that warning.

However, the US’ trade policies have brought BRICS member states closer, and prompted them to try and unite the developing and emerging economies to oppose US policies, as evident from the statement issued at the BRICS summit.

Trump’s trade policies have also prompted BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) to expedite the building of a platform for new instrument­al dynamism and deep integratio­n with other emerging and developing economies.

Trump’s trade policies have also prompted BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) to expedite the building of a platform for new instrument­al dynamism and deep integratio­n with other emerging and developing economies. The five member states of the group, for instance, have decided to increase intra-BRICS trade and lower tariffs against each other, because they have a collective interest in promoting free trade.

The BRICS group has made some remarkable achievemen­ts in fields such as finance, trade, agricultur­e, science, security and academic dialogue. The establishm­ent of the BRICS New Developmen­t Bank and a business forum are two of its most important achievemen­ts. The BRICS members have already discussed greater financial integratio­n and investment facilitati­on, including transactio­n settlement and direct investment in local currencies, consistent with their respective central bank’s mandates.

The BRICS summit also took forward discussion­s on a “BRICS investment facilitati­on” mechanism to facilitate investment­s among the member states. South Africa, more broadly Africa, can benefit from increased trade and investment with fast growing BRICS countries such as China and India, as BRICS accounts for more than 40 percent of the global population, represents some of the biggest emerging economies and has the potential to reshape world trade.

The theme of the Johannesbu­rg summit, “BRICS in Africa: Collaborat­ion for Inclusive Growth and Shared Prosperity in the 4th Industrial Revolution” indicates BRICS is committed to leading the next generation’s developmen­t. India has pledged that it would like to work with BRICS on the issue of the Fourth Industrial Revolution to together prepare best practices and policies in this connection.

Besides, the Johannesbu­rg summit provided a platform for BRICS members to hold important discussion on the sidelines. Russian President Vladimir Putin met with his Turkish counterpar­t Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Johannesbu­rg on July 26 to discuss trade and other issues. And China and India held discussion­s on trade matters, not least because both have been at the receiving end of the US’ punitive tariffs and trade restrictio­ns. In fact, the two sides vowed to defend the World Trade Organizati­on framework and rules.

With Trump pursuing protection­ism and unilateral­ism against the global trend of multilater­alism and economic globalizat­ion, the fate of internatio­nal agreements appears under siege. In such circumstan­ce, BRICS is perhaps one of the most important blocs that is openly opposing protection­ism and promoting globalizat­ion and free trade, both in principle and action, and has thus emerged as the most potent force against US unilateral­ism. The author is a research fellow at and director of the Division of American Economic Studies at the Institute of American Studies, China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations.

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