China Today (English)

BRICS: The Road Ahead

- By EVANDRO MENEZES DE CARVALHO EVANDRO MENEZES DE CARVALHO is chief executive editor of the Brazilian edition of the magazine China Today and head of the Brazil-China Studies Center of FGV Law School, Brazil.

BRICS has entered its second decade of existence and the outcomes of the first decade were positive. The group highlighte­d South-South cooperatio­n as “an important element of internatio­nal efforts in the field of developmen­t” (Joint Communiqué, 2008), reiterated the “central role” of the G20 for global governance ( Joint Statement, 2009) and advocated reform of internatio­nal institutio­ns – especially the IMF, the World Bank, and the UN – in order to reflect the new reality of the internatio­nal system and increase the participat­ion of emerging economies in internatio­nal decision-making processes in a way compatible with the relevance of the economies.

Each year, the agenda of the BRICS has become wider and the Summit in South Africa in 2018 brought important contributi­ons, particular­ly in the area of people-to-people exchanges and research and innovation, signaling these as important vectors of action of the group for the future.

Aiming to maximize the opportunit­ies and address the challenges arising from the fourth Industrial Revolution, the 10th Summit of the BRICS decided to give full operationa­lization to the establishm­ent of the BRICS partnershi­p on New Industrial Revolution (PartNIR). PartNIR intends to create science parks and technology business incubators. The five countries also agreed to establish the BRICS Energy Research Cooperatio­n Platform and also the BRICS Agricultur­al Research Platform (ARP) with the last one initiated by India in 2016. These initiative­s are in line with the outcomes of the BRICS Environmen­t Ministers’ Meetings, including the implementa­tion of the Environmen­tally Friendly Technology Platform.

In the context of the people-to-people exchange, two important decisions of the Summit in Johannesbu­rg need to be highlighte­d. The first one is the approval of the establishm­ent of the BRICS working group on tourism that will improve the economic developmen­t and cultural exchanges amongst peoples in BRICS countries through travel, trade, and tourism infrastruc­ture. And, the second one is the proposal to establish the BRICS Women’s Forum and the BRICS Women’s Business Alliance. This is an inevitable and necessary step to promote social and economic justice since gender inequality is a reality in all the BRICS countries.

Now, what is the road ahead? What do we expect from the next summit?

The current internatio­nal circumstan­ces are more challengin­g than the first decade of BRICS. The U.S. has assumed a unilateral­ist and protection­ist posture that adds more instabilit­y to internatio­nal trade. In addition, the BRICS Summit in 2019 will be held in Brazil whose new government has given signals of alignment with American diplomacy. BRICS is now called upon to reflect on how to deal with situations of uncertaint­y and difficulti­es not only at the inter-

national level, but also within itself.

Like any internatio­nal cooperatio­n scheme, the role of the economical­ly stronger countries is decisive for the continuity of an economic project. Look at the case of the European Union (EU). BREXIT – the withdrawal of the United Kingdom (U.K.) from the EU – had a negative impact on the life of this internatio­nal organizati­on, but it did not mean the end of European integratio­n. After all, the U.K. never embraced the European project in its entirety. Perhaps the destiny of the EU would have been different if Germany or France had announced their withdrawal from the organizati­on. The European Union also resists the turbulence arising from the BREXIT because of the high level of institutio­nalization of the organizati­on. This is not the case of the BRICS, which is only a platform for cooperatio­n that depends crucially on the political will of the government­s to hold annual meetings and to deepen their broad agenda of cooperatio­n.

In 2017, there was a trilateral dialogue between the ministers of foreign affairs of Russia, India, and China. In late 2018 the presidents of these three countries gathered together during the G20 in Argentina. A RIC dialogue was interprete­d by some analysts as the foreshadow­ing of the end of the BRICS. But perhaps it is just the opposite: it can provide the political conditions for BRICS to remain active in its second decade. In addition, BRICS-Plus dialogue with emerging markets and developing countries

Above all, it is time to create constructi­ve consensus in the defense of peace and the democratiz­ation of the internatio­nal system.

and the outreach dialogue with partners from the Global South have shown being a channel of vitality for BRICS to expand its diplomatic capacity internatio­nally. Probably BRICS will accept new members in the future.

Brazil has many reasons to be fully committed to BRICS. Next year, there will be the establishm­ent of the Americas Regional Office of the New Developmen­t Bank in São Paulo, consolidat­ing the presence of the Bank in this continent and in Latin America. The BRICS cooperatio­n in energy to promote an energy efficient lifestyle, and the collaborat­ion in agricultur­al research are topics that Brazil probably will give great importance.

All of these recent initiative­s strengthen­ed multilater­alism and cooperatio­n not only among the government­s, but also among other partners such as science organizati­ons, civil society, the private sector, and financial institutio­ns.

In times of uncertaint­y, it is time to focus on concrete initiative­s and bring the people closer to embrace the possibilit­ies of building a more prosperous and harmonious world. Above all, it is time to create constructi­ve consensus in the defense of peace and the democratiz­ation of the internatio­nal system. In this sense, the fact that the 10th summit has celebrated the centenary of the birth of Nelson Mandela, recognizin­g his contributi­on “to the struggle for democracy internatio­nally and the promotion of the culture of peace throughout the world,” is a gesture in which diplomatic meaning converges with the principles of BRICS.

Finally, to ensure its successful trajectory in times of great uncertaint­y in the internatio­nal arena, it is time for BRICS to think about taking its first step towards its institutio­nalization, creating its permanent secretary. If this topic is not a priority for the next summit in Brazil, it will remain on the horizon of its members. Moving towards horizons is a preconditi­on for moving towards the future.

 ??  ?? On July 27, 2018, the “BRICS+” leaders’ dialogue is held in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.
On July 27, 2018, the “BRICS+” leaders’ dialogue is held in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.
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