The BRICS stand for Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. Two years ago, they floated the idea of establishing a new development bank they could control. That would better serve their interests. It would not be subject to the kinds of policy constraints under which the IMF and the existing development banks had to operate. The BRICS leaders set up a task force to develop the modalities of the institution. The group, after considerable debate, submitted a proposal to the Sixth BRICS summit held at Fortaleza, a city in the northeast of Brazil. The meeting attended by the heads of state and government of the five countries approved the proposal. Instead of setting up one institution as originally proposed, it decided to create two – a development bank to be called the New Development Bank (NDB) and a financial emergency relief fund named the Contingency Reserve Arrangement (CRA). In other words, it adopted the model developed at Bretton Woods in 1944 by the countries that were about to win the European part of the Second World War.
It has been said that the large emerging markets, by creating the Fortaleza twins, were posing various kinds of challenges to the existing international economic order. This was dominated by the United States for 70 years. But with the perceived economic and political decline of the United States, there was an opportunity to dilute the power of the industrial world. The BRICS economic and financial institutions were seen as one way of announcing the arrival of a large economic bloc in the global system. After all, the five BRICS nations had one half of the world’s population and one quarter of the global product. However, the BRICS concept put forward by Goldman Sachs in 2001, the consulting firm, grabbed public attention partly because of a catchy acronym. What also mattered was the fact that the BRICS nations were growing at rates considerably higher than the rate of growth of Western nations. Since then, the average rate of GDP increase for the BRICS has dropped to one-half compared with the time the concept was defined, but the old economies were also suffering. The wide growth gap between the old and the new has not narrowed.
The NDB, with its headquarters in Shanghai and to be led by a yet-to-be named Indian, was to start business with $50 billion in capital. It is expected that the NDB’s capital base will increase to $100 billion when other emerging countries are invited to join the original cluster. This institution will focus on two development sectors -- infrastructure and sustainable development.
The CRA had pledges of $100 billion, which would become available to member countries in case they were faced with financial distress. The CRA is not a fund in the sense that the term has come to be understood in the context of the IMF. It is a tangle of foreign reserves ($41 billion from China, $18 billion each form Brazil, India and Russia and the remaining $5 billion from South Africa). What drew attention to the Fortaleza decision was the claim that the BRICS had created a new global economic and financial order to rival the one set up at Bretton Woods.
The establishment of the Fortaleza twins reflects the sharply different interests of the BRICS group of countries. Among them, China and India will likely pursue conflicting objectives in the NDB and CRA. China, with more than $4 trillion in liquid foreign exchange reserves, is anxious about the assets it acquires with such a large amount. This is 40 per cent of the total global reserves estimated at a bit more than $10 trillion. At the moment, some 70 per cent of Chinese reserves are invested in the United States, most of it in Treasury bills. Beijing has set up a sovereign investment fund of its own, which is providing capital for both Chinese and foreign projects and acquisitions. The NDB is another vehicle for diversification. It will provide multilateral cover (which means guarantees) for the investments it makes in the economies of emerging nations.
India needs a trillion dollars of new investment in the five-year 2012-17 period. It is required to improve its economy’s physical infrastructure. Without this kind of capital outlay in the twelfth five- year plan, it will not be able to regain the growth momentum generated after the reforms of the 1990s. Can these differences be bridged between the two largest founding members of the new institution? This question will need to be answered as the two institutions begin their operations.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 4th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (7)
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The writer is a well known banker and has considerable expertise in this field. BRICS is a new development which is different from the world bodies we already have. The author is very cautious in welcoming the initiative. Is it because India is one of the shareholders?
It is too early to say what role the NDB will play in future affairs. However it is a start.
A few observations.
Brazil, Russia and South Africa, the other three constituents of BRICS, get along very well with India. BRICS does not preclude bilateral relationships. While China has an uneasy relationship with most neighbors and the US, India does not have any such baggage with any country except Pakistan. India's bilateral relationship with Japan may be one of the definitive relationships of the 21st century. Don't forget Japan still has the 3rd largest economy and is traditionally wary of China. India can draw $18 billion from the CRA, but it already has access to Japan's $50 billion through a bilateral currency swap arrangement. US and Japan hold equal shares of 12%+ in ADB. Both China and India hold roughly 5%+ in ADB. JICA provides maximum ODA to India and India is the second largest recipient after China from JBIC. Despite the US-Indian relationship going through a temporary lull, the relationship may improve dramatically in the next couple of years.Where is the conflict between India and China,when China wants to use New Development Bank for diversification of investment and multilateral cover ,where as Indian need of One Trillion Dollors investment can never be fully covered by total corps of this New Bank of only $50 Billion, which the bank will make investment based on the merit of Projects not only of India.By the way China has shown interest in investing $300 Billion in India after Modi Government