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Fairer World Order: BRIC Countries Match, Surpass G7
BRIC countries catch up and overtake G7
Oleg Mityayev
MOSCOW. - The Russian city of Yekaterinburg on May 16 hosted the
first official summit of BRIC, a group comprising four countries
showing the highest rate of economic growth - Brazil, Russia, India
and China.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in the wake of the summit that
the event was aimed at promoting a fairer world order.
The BRIC nations currently account for 15% of the global economy and
42% of global currency reserves. These are important reasons for BRIC
to have ambitions to influence international economic and financial
policies.
According to many estimates, emerging economies will the driving
force of the expected global economic recovery - that is, they will
bail out wealthier nations. Citigroup's chief executive Vikram Pandit
said at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum in early June
that "China, India and Russia will become the engine of world growth
for a while."
Most estimates put China's and India's 2009 GDP growth at 6% and 4%,
respectively, while the Group of 7 will still be in recession. The two
fastest growing modern markets, China and India, are not heavily
dependent on exports to industrially developed countries, but are
developing independently due to booming internal demand.
Emerging economies linked to developed ones by currency and trade
However, most economists are convinced that emerging economies, BRIC
countries included, are unable to develop independently of the
industrialized nations. International trade and the global currency
system are reportedly the two key reasons behind this unbreakable
bond.
The need to reform the existing system of monetary management was a
key issue in the run-up to the Yekaterinburg summit. All the BRIC
countries put forth their own proposals about how to decrease the role
of the weakened U.S. dollar in international trade and finance.
One proposal was to boost the role of SDRs (Special Drawing Rights),
an international reserve asset issued by the IMF; another, a broader
use of regional reserve currencies and their combinations; or the use
of their own currencies for bilateral settlements.
However, shortly before the event, its participants seemed to recall
that they kept a large portion of their currency reserves in dollar
assets, and those assets' further depreciation was the last thing they
wanted.
As of last March, China has U.S. Treasuries worth $767.9 billion,
Brazil $126.6 billion, and Russia $138.4 billion.
BRIC countries overtaking the West at different paces
Jim O'Neill, chief global economist at Goldman Sachs, who invented
the term BRIC in 2001, has issued several forecasts since on the time
these countries' aggregate GDP exceeds that of G7, with each forecast
putting the date closer. The latest one says this will happen by 2027,
less than 20 years from now.
China's economy will exceed the U.S. in size at about the same time,
O'Neill predicts.
At the same time, however, the BRIC group has major discrepancies
between its members. China and India are expected to show substantial
growth even in 2009, the year marked by the deepest global recession.
Brazil's economy will be in stagnation, posting a 1% GDP decline,
according to the same estimate, while Russia will suffer a deep fall,
by over 6%.
Indeed China and India have objectively better prospects than Russia
and Brazil. This difference is due to higher diversification of the
two leading BRIC economies.
"China's and India's development is fuelled by a steadily growing
internal consumer demand and state investment," Maxim Simagin, analyst
at the Alfa Capital asset management company, told RIA Novosti.
"Russia and Brazil are two export-oriented, commodity-based economies.
Brazil's economy is even more diversified than Russia's because the
latter is heavily dependent upon exports of natural gas, oil, metals
and fertilizers, while Brazil has in addition a developed financial
sector, agriculture, manufacturing and services," he added.
The term BRIC primarily refers to the ever-growing clout of the
world's largest emerging economies, not to a political bloc.
Therefore, that the group's members are developing at different rates
does not mean this new driving force of the global economy is going to
become weaker.
Russian Information Agency Novosti
June 17, 2009
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