The BRICS leaders
met in Brasilia on 15th July 2014 and signed the long anticipated
document to create the $100 billion BRICS Development Bank and a reserve
currency pool worth over another $100 billion. Documents on cooperation between
BRICS export credit agencies and an agreement of cooperation on innovation were
also inked.
Why was it needed?
The US and the
west have dominated and controlled the world finances for over half a century
now. The voting rights in the IMF are greatly skewed in favor of US and Europe.
For instance, Netherlands and Belgium have more votes than Brazil and the US
has around 3 times the votes the second ranked country (Japan) has.
I did a few
calculations and found out that the BRICS nations which represent almost
one-fifth (19.8%) of the world’s economy have only about one-tenth (11%) of the
votes in the IMF.
Nonetheless, a
shift of power from the old to the rising ones is quite evident through long
term growth prospects. Ever since the recession of 2007, the old powerful
economies have dwindled while China, India and Brazil have managed to keep
growing at a decent rate. Over the last decade the BRICS combined GDP has grown
5 times more than that of the developed nations.
For almost a
decade now, the emerging economies have been trying to get the quotas changed
in the IMF but to no avail. The European nations are too power hungry to make
any such amendments.
This prompted the
BRICS nations to find an alternative to the IMF monopoly where there economic
weight would reflect in their rights and after a long conception period the
BRICS Development Bank was finally born last week.
How big is it?
Not much. It has
begun with a capital base of $50 billion and plans to add another $50 billion
soon. On the other hand, the World Bank has $232 billion and the Asian
Development Bank (Although Asian, it is controlled by the US) has $165 billion
is capital. Still, for starters $100 billion seem good enough for NDB.
Why wasn’t it made bigger?
Equality comes at
a price. To give everyone equal rights, NDB had to compromise on its financial
clout as China would have wanted higher voting rights had it contributed more.
What are the expectations?
- The basic aim of the NDB is to provide funds for the infrastructural development and sustainability of its member nations.
- To increase influence over the West.
- Force IMF to change the quotas and reallocate the votes.
Why is it better than IMF and World Bank?
- It is not influenced by the United States.
- The new bank will provide money for infrastructure and development projects in BRICS countries, and unlike the IMF or World Bank, each nation has equal say, regardless of GDP size.
- The founding nations will retain atleast 55% of the votes even when other nations join the bank.
- It seems like a win-win for everybody. Russia got something that could challenge the IMF and the World Bank, China got the headquarters which prove its strength in the world economy, South Africa got regional headquarters, Brazil got the chairman post and India got the Presidency of the Bank.
Will it succeed?
The answer is it
has already begun to. It has succeeded in sending a strong signal to the world
about the economic power of the BRICS nations which is being reflected in the
media across the world. However, what everyone is skeptical about is its
ability to decrease the infrastructural funding gap with just initial $50 billion.
Nonetheless, it seems like a good initiative on the part of emerging economies and we might soon see countries such as Argentina, Mexico and Indonesia join in.
3 comments:
Good research ....
Thanks. :)
Good work
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