INTL Is BRICS a Real Bloc? - The Diplomat 4/22/2011

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use......
http://the-diplomat.com/2011/04/22/is-brics-a-real-bloc/


Is BRICS a Real Bloc?

East Asia | Politics | China
April 22, 2011By Richard Weitz
Tensions and diverging interests between China and Russia loomed large over the group’s latest meeting. Will BRICS ever find a unified voice?

When the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa met for a day-long summit in the south China resort city of Sanya last week, they may all have privately marvelled at quite how quickly their small group has risen to become one of the world’s most influential international concepts.

Indeed, the summit—only the third in the group’s history and the first in which South Africa has participated—overshadowed the concurrent meeting of the G-20, which is now seen as the world’s official collective manager of the global economy. Yet despite the media hoopla that now surrounds BRICS, there are some serious issues facing the collective if it wants to build on its success.

On paper, BRICS certainly has considerable potential. Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa are influential actors at the regional level, with their combined populations amounting to nearly three billion people; they account for one-quarter of global gross national output and possess much of the world’s stockpiles of key national resources.

BRICS governments also share a commitment to state sovereignty, a multi-polar world in which no single country dominates, and respect for the authority of the United Nations. At the closing news conferences at Sanya, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev declared that, ‘We must act to boost the potential of the United Nations, and to ensure that all the decisions adopted by the UN General Assembly and UN Security Council are effective and respected.’

But by going on to note the position of Russia and China as veto-wielding permanent members of the Security Council, Medvedev also drew attention to one of the biggest challenges facing BRICS—the frequently diverging interests of its two most powerful members.

Of course, you wouldn’t know this judging by the rhetoric of Chinese and Russian writers, who have been keen to laud the BRICS’ rise. ‘The current global economic order, established over decades after World War II, had long been dominated by developed countries,’ one Chinese commentator wrote explaining BRICS’ importance. ‘The arrangement had worked for decades, but appeared increasingly incompetent in the past decade as the rise of major emerging economies dramatically changed the world economic landscape.’

Russian analyst Leonid Ivashov, meanwhile, argued that ‘the agreements sealed in Sanya represent a serious bid to reconfigure today's world.’ He added: the ‘process…helps Russia both maintain its status in international politics and preserve its statehood and territorial integrity.’

But despite such effusive praise on both sides, the reality is that the Sino-Russian relationship can hardly be described as harmonious. Despite years of negotiations, Russian and Chinese energy companies have proved unable to reach agreement on the appropriate price the Chinese should pay for natural gas imports from Russia. And, although their oil ties have seen greater progress, the Russians now believe the Chinese are underpaying them for these deliveries. In addition, Chinese and Russian officials have repeatedly announced grandiose oil and natural gas deals that, until recently, have failed to materialize.

Limited reciprocal investment is another source of mutual disappointment. The Russian government is particularly eager to secure Chinese investment to help achieve its goal of modernizing the Russian economy. Shortly before arriving in Sanya, Medvedev said that: ‘In my opinion, $2.6 billion of China’s direct investment into the Russian Federation and nearly $1 billion of Russia's direct investment into China isn’t much. We know that both China and Russia invest a lot in other economies. I believe we should consider enhancing the investment cooperation.’ By the end of 2009, China's accumulative non-financial direct investment in Russia was a mere $2.02 billion.

In addition, the regional policies of the two countries are rarely in sync. In East Asia, China and Russia share concerns over the evolving political, military, and economic situation on the Korean Peninsula, which borders both countries. But Beijing and Moscow have pursued largely independent policies toward both North and South Korea. The two country’s policies towards Japan and Taiwan also aren’t particularly well integrated, while in South Asia, the two have actually adopted divergent positions on critical issues.

Most recently, though, China and Russia have declined to coordinate their policies regarding Libya or other Arab world uprisings, despite common fears of contagion, dislike of Western military intervention on humanitarian grounds, and concerns about losing valuable commercial opportunities. Indeed, Sino-Russian cooperation in the Libyan War has so far predominately consisted of their government officials’ citing each other’s opposition to Western interference.

But it’s not just differences between China and Russia that could hamper progress of a BRICS vision of the world—the bloc also lacks an independent organizational structure, common projects for many areas, and, most seriously, member nations harbour conflicting interests on key issues.

Even in the economic realm, the core area of their concerns, BRICS members have allocated limited resources to collective multilateral initiatives. Member governments have offered financial and development assistance primarily on a unilateral or bilateral basis, which gives them greater individual influence, while the absence of a free trade zone or common membership in the World Trade Organization impedes commerce among the five nations—the most important economic partner of most of the five countries is usually a non-BRICS country.

In addition, the organization’s current roster of members includes some of the world’s leading national energy suppliers (Russia and Brazil) and consumers (China and India). These cross-cutting interests have impeded rapid progress in this area, and their energy cooperation has largely been occurring outside the BRIC framework. Any energy collaboration that did occur within the group’s framework would probably consist of a mechanism for dialogue and information exchange rather than a body for setting quotas or fixing prices.

The currencies of the BRICS countries, meanwhile, are used extensively only inside their respective nations. BRICS leaders have periodically expressed support for conducting bilateral trade between themselves in their own national currencies to reduce dependence on the US dollar—which still accounts for more than 60 percent of global foreign exchange reserves —and pave the way for their own currencies to play a bigger international role. But since they all have massive dollar dominated holdings—including billions worth of US Treasury bills held by the Chinese alone—they would hardly want to take steps to reduce the currency’s value.

The cross-cutting interests of BRICS members often impede their cooperating on non-economic issues as well. China resists elevating India, which is a potential security rival, to permanent UNSC membership. The wording of the text they adopted on the topic last week—which makes no promises regarding UNSC membership—makes clear their divisions: ‘China and Russia reiterate the importance they attach to the status of India, Brazil and South Africa in international affairs, and understand and support their aspiration to play a greater role in the UN.’

To be fair to members, there has been some effort at co-ordination to enhance the group’s impact on global security affairs, including by issuing joint declarations. For example, in their Sanya Declaration, BRICS leaders called for ‘establishing a more equitable and fair world’ with ‘peace, harmony, cooperation and scientific development.’

But despite this rosy goal, their foreign policy initiatives have largely been about negatives—agreeing on what they don’t agree on. In Sanya, for example, BRICS leaders issued a declaration criticizing the NATO-led coalition fighting the regime of Col. Muammar Gaddafi for using excessive force. According to media reports, the governments of China, Russia, and India have blocked British and French efforts to enact stronger UNSC resolutions authorizing a wider range of sanctions and military strikes against the Libyan government.

Still, whatever the signs of agreement over Libya, the potential for deterioration in China-Russian ties in the near future looms large.

Until recently, Russian analysts were confident about maintaining military superiority over China for at least the next decade, but recent displays of growing Chinese defence capabilities, combined with a more confrontational style of Chinese diplomacy, appear to be causing the same unease in Russia as in other countries. The Russian military for its part has begun to cite China’s growing military potential as a reason why Russia needs to acquire more warships and retain tactical nuclear weapons despite US pressure to negotiate their elimination in the next round of the strategic arms talks. The Commander in Chief of the Russian Navy, Adm. Vladimir Vysotsky, has also cited Beijing’s interest in the Arctic as a reason to field a larger fleet.

When asked in a pre-summit interview whether the so-called China threat theory had gained popularity in Russia, Sergei Razov, the Russian ambassador to China, couldn’t deny that many Russians shared such concerns.

‘Russia is an open and democratic country. Many express different opinions on different issues including Russia’s bilateral ties with China or other countries,’ he said, adding that the China threat theory was ‘only one of the views and can’t represent the majority of our country.’

He added that the Russian government is devoting itself to a ‘strategic partnership of coordination with China.’ But the choice of language implied that a failure of this approach could lead at the very least to Moscow revising its assessment of the relationship.

For now at least, the prospects for BRICS as a coherent bloc remain up in the air.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
BRICS is a bloc not because the countries involved say so, but because globalists like George Soros say so.

dd
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20110503a1.html

Tuesday, May 3, 2011
BRICS without the mortar
By KEVIN RAFFERTY
Special to The Japan Times

HONG KONG — Last month's summit of the BRIC countries, Brazil, Russia, India, China, now renamed BRICS with the addition of South Africa, announced with great fanfare that the group was determined to punch its new muscle on the world economic stage and no longer to be pushed around by the tired old powers. But you have to ask if it was worth the leaders making the long trek to China.

The BRICS account for 40 percent of the world population (though only 24 percent of global GDP), and have a legitimate complaint that the world has hitherto been dominated by a cozy club of rich countries with about 10 percent of the world's population. The communique called for "a comprehensive reform" of the United Nations, including the Security Council, "with a view to making it more effective, efficient and representative" so that it can meet growing global challenges.

One key challenge is the fragile state of the global economy, finely imbalanced with a whole range of potential disturbances, from current account and huge budget deficits in the United States and other Western countries, to the rising price of oil and other commodities. Problems are exacerbated by unhealthy dependence on the U.S. dollar as the world's effective reserve currency, something that Beijing has increasingly grumbled about with its huge but vulnerable $3 trillion pot of foreign exchange reserves.

BRICS' leaders duly called for a broader based international currency system. According to Chinese officials, they steered away from the question of the renminbi exchange rate, but did discuss the role of the special drawing right (SDR) in the international monetary system, including the composition of the SDR currency basket.

Was all this useless posturing or merely bad theater? On the wider question of making the U.N. and the Security Council more representative, China's opposition long stopped Japan from getting a permanent seat, and even at the Sanya summit, Beijing stopped short of giving its blessing to a seat for India.

On the vexed currency issue, China wants to have its cake and eat it. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, pointed out that the renminbi had ticked all of the boxes for inclusion in the basket of currencies that comprise the SDR, except one: It is not "marketable."

China is reluctant to surrender control which would be involved in convertibility or in letting its currency be part of the SDR basket (composed of 41.9 percent U.S. dollars, 37.4 percent euros, 11.3 percent pound sterling, and 9.4 percent yen).

Indeed, the preoccupation of China and the BRICS with the SDR is a distraction. The SDR is not a currency. It is a unit of account between the IMF and its 187 member countries and it cannot be used for international payments, even between IMF members. Changing the role of the SDR to make it a currency would be as messy as any of the leading issues that the IMF has yet to grapple with, including who will succeed Strauss-Kahn and what his or her revised job description should be.

China's obfuscation may have been an attempt to hide differences between the BRICS members, continents apart, with real political and economic arguments between them, not least on the damage that the renminbi exchange rate has done to Brazil and India. The BRICS ought to be thinking of using some practical mortar to build their dream economic house.

Meanwhile, at the wider world of the IMF and World Bank spring meetings, held at virtually the same time as the BRICS' summit, there was enough evidence that the world is facing a host of problems any one of which could tip it back into crisis.

Robert Zoellick, president of the World Bank, with a particular eye on rising food prices endangering the lives of hundreds of millions of the world's poorest people, warned that, "We are one shock away from a full-blown crisis."

High oil prices, encouraged by speculation on the political and economic uncertainty in the Middle East, are a constant threat to recovery in the West as well as to China's own economic miracle. Too many countries in the West got fat and lazy on easy credit and now have to find ways of paying for their extravagant parties without making unemployment worse.

Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Singapore's finance minister and chairman of the key IMF committee, summed up the economic situation, saying that "The recovery has gained headway, but there are significant vulnerabilities still in the global economic and financial system." He cited the poor quality of public sector balance sheets, the need for bank recapitalization and the legacy of an international monetary system still not in satisfactory shape. He listed Middle East uncertainty, disasters in Japan and rising commodity prices as new vulnerabilities, to which Strauss-Kahn added unemployment that the old formula of growth alone cannot solve.

The world economy could be held hostage to power play between the old and the new great powers. Political Washington, only a few blocks from the IMF, is increasingly acrimoniously split over how to tackle the U.S. deficits. Some American economists call the U.S. a banana republic without the bananas.

It is not only the BRICS that don't have a building plan, let alone bricks and mortar, to construct a modernized international economic order. When it comes to the IMF and World Bank, the preoccupation of the U.S. is to protect its veto, effectively 15 percent of the votes — it has more than 16 percent. The Europeans and Japan want to keep their seats at the top table, while China and the rising powers want more shout, more of their people in the top jobs.

The risk is both to the IMF and to the global system. The IMF has surveillance, reporting and monitoring roles involving the world economy that should be kept as professional as possible under the direction of the managing director. The board is the place for political decisions, such as arguments over shareholdings, whether the SDR should be turned into a currency, but IMF officials should be free to report on economies and currencies without worrying about whether they may upset Washington or Beijing or Timbuktu.

Dangers of politicization will increase when Strauss-Kahn steps down, possibly this year if he decides to challenge Nicolas Sarkozy for the French presidency. Although it has been agreed that the bosses of the IMF and World Bank should not be a European (IMF) and American (World Bank) preserve, and the fund is committed to "open and transparent" procedures, previous experience has been anything but. Expect a vicious struggle unless someone can persuade the U.S., China and Europe that internationalism, not nationalism, is what is needed.

Kevin Rafferty was managing editor at the World Bank 1997-99.
 

FarmerJohn

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The BRICs are viewed as a bloc because they are all large resource-rich countries at a similar stage in their development. Their national interests may be sharply divergent from one another.
 
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