BRIC by BRIC: Leaders Summit in Russia
Carin ZissisJune 12, 2009
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| Leaders of (L-R) India, Russia, China, and Brazil on the sidelines of a G8 summit. (AP Photo) |
As the world finds itself battered by a global financial storm, the four giants see signs of hope, with their markets showing signs of year-to-date improvement. Brazil offers an example of the reason for confidence. The June 9 news that its economy officially entered into recession has been met with a sense of aplomb. As the AQ blog notes, the first-quarter contraction of 0.8 percent stands as a relative improvement over the 3.8 percent rate during the previous quarter. This week, its Central Bank cut interest rates to 9.25 percent—in the single digits for the first time since the 1960s. “Among the last to fall into recession, Brazil may be among the first to grow out of it,” according to this week’s edition of The Economist.
Now, along with two other BRIC members, Brazil announced intentions to shift reserves into multicurrency IMF bonds. China and Russia pledged $50 billion and $10 billion respectively. Brazil, which in the past sought IMF assistance, plans to invest $10 billion. A Bloomberg analysis looks at the trilateral move in the context of “rebalancing” power, saying: “For U.S. President Barack Obama and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, that’s a warning. For investors, it may be an opportunity.” Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said this week: “The good news is that rich countries are in crisis and that emerging countries are making a huge contribution to save the economy and, consequently, save the rich countries.” Finance Minister Guide Mantega told reporters highlighted Brazil’s role as a creditor, saying its IMF investment would “aid developing countries with scarce credit.”
A Reuters analysis finds that, despite the growing sense of a BRIC community, divergent goals exist. China’s GDP outstrips that of the other three countries combined and, while Brazil and Russia signal interest in weakening dollar dependency, Beijing still supports the dollar as the dominant currency. Financial Times argues that "it is debatable whether the Brics have anything more in common than their size and economic potential." The article makes the case that, aside from the belief that Washington's say in the global economy should be lessened, the differences between the countries remain a barrier to any substantive agreements at the summit.
The BRIC concept has roots in a 2001, when Goldman Sachs economist Jim O’Neill penned a paper forecasting that by 2050, the four countries could stand among the world’s six biggest economies. The paper did not predict a formal alliance, but Russia hosted the first ministerial-level BRIC meeting last year.
Access Goldman Sachs materials about BRIC. The Jamestown Foundation evaluates Sino-Brazilian ties. Read AS/COA analysis of Lula’s May trip to China.
Send questions and comments for the editor to: ascoa.online@as-coa.org.
See more in: Brazil, Economics & Finance, Asia & Latin America
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