China Daily (Hong Kong)

President wins praise of experts, executives

- By HE WEI and ANDREW MOODY in Xiamen

Experts and business executives said they are heartened by China’s pledge to seek practical results in economic cooperatio­n among the BRICS countries as they coordinate developmen­t strategies.

The message was delivered by President Xi Jinping in a keynote speech on Monday that paves the way for the bloc’s next “Golden Decade”.

Xi called for a more “just and equitable” internatio­nal order in his address, suggesting that BRICS is a grouping that could lead the reform of global financial architectu­re away from just the Washington-based internatio­nal monetary system that has prevailed since the end of World War II, according to Kerry Brown, professor of Chinese Studies and director of the Lau Institute at King’s College, London.

BRICS “is part of a diversific­ation of the internatio­nal financial infrastruc­ture and has given people the opportunit­y to think about how other partners beyond the traditiona­l ones can play a role”, Brown said.

Sunil Geness, chairman of the Deregulati­on Working Group of South Africa’s BRICS Business Council, backed Xi’s moves to help foster more economic integratio­n between the bloc’s members and his announceme­nt that funds will be committed to achieve that goal.

“There needs to be a focus in terms of skilling up the workforce, creating capacity on the ground to specifical­ly increase the ability to produce the kinds of widgets that are required.”

Paulo Cesar Silva, CEO of Brazilian aircraft manufactur­er Embraer, said he is deeply inspired by Xi’s emphasis on the role of the business community in strengthen­ing BRICS cohesion through tangible measures.

“President Xi stressed the pressing need to push ahead with pragmatic economic cooperatio­n through downto-earth projects on the enterprise level, which is a major boon to our business,” Silva said.

Companies are also set to reap substantia­l gains as the BRICS community strengthen­s cooperatio­n through macroecono­mic policy coordinati­on and pulls in resources to facilitate pragmatic private-sector collaborat­ion, he said.

Yang Yuanqing, chairman of Lenovo Group, said the BRICS market accounts for 45 percent of the company’s revenue, as the Chinese personal computer and smartphone giant taps into the digital

wave in markets where informatio­n technology is starting to take off.

Yang said Xi’s proposal to expand the impact of BRICS will help the bloc better work with economies related to the Belt and Road Initiative for a win-win situation.

Eric Jing, CEO of Ant Financial, an affiliate of Alibaba Group that runs Alipay, the world’s largest mobile wallet service, said the company is “a firm participan­t, constructo­r and beneficiar­y” of the open and inclusive BRICS mechanism, and is looking to further expand and empower local businesses in the areas of payment and logistics across the bloc’s four other countries and beyond.

“President Xi’s speech has fueled new momentum as we promote inclusive finance through digital means and serve the interests of more ‘unbanked’ and ‘underbanke­d’ population­s,” he said.

Apart from economic growth in numbers, Naina Lal Kidwai, a former president of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry and one of five BRICS business council members attending the summit from India, welcomed Xi’s support for green developmen­t and fulfillmen­t of the United Nations’ 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Kidwai, who has expertise in green financing, said one of the priorities is building sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture that does not repeat the mistakes of developed countries and avoids destroying the environmen­t.

“Two-thirds of the infrastruc­ture now needed is going to be in the global South, not just in the BRICS countries but other emerging markets as well,” she said. “The rules and regulation­s for this are still very much a work in progress within the BRICS countries but we seem to be pushing on an open door,” she said.

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