• World
  • Mar 27

Brazil hosts 10th BRICS Policy Planning Dialogue

• The 10th BRICS Policy Planning Dialogue was held on March 24-25 in Brasilia, bringing together policy planners from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, alongside senior representatives from the expanded BRICS membership.

• Raghuram S, Joint Secretary (Policy Planning & Research), Ministry of External Affairs led the Indian delegation. 

• As the current President of BRICS, Brazil hosted the current edition of the BRICS Policy Planning Dialogue, as a part of its preparations for the forthcoming BRICS Summit later this year.

• Discussions were held on a wide range of global geopolitical issues as well as regional developments.

• The Dialogue provided an opportunity to deliberate on the institutional development of BRICS, reflecting the bloc’s recent expansion. 

• Key development priorities, including global health cooperation, the evolving international trade and financial scenario, climate action, artificial intelligence governance, and reforms of multilateral peace and security frameworks were also discussed.

The BRICS nations

• The BRICS nations or Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa form the key pillars of south-south cooperation and are the representative voice of emerging markets and developing countries in the global forums such as the G20.

• The grouping has become a 11-nation body now with Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Indonesia joining it as new members.

• The acronym BRIC was first used in 2001 by Goldman Sachs in their Global Economics Paper, ‘The World Needs Better Economic BRICs’ on the basis of econometric analyses projecting that the four economies would individually and collectively occupy far greater economic space and would be amongst the world’s largest economies in the next 50 years or so.

• The leaders of BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) countries met for the first time in St. Petersburg, Russia, on the margins of the G8 Outreach Summit in July 2006. Shortly afterwards, in September 2006, the group was formalised as BRIC during the First BRIC Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, which met on the sidelines of the General Debate of the UN Assembly in New York City.

• After a series of high level meetings, the first BRIC summit was held in Yekaterinburg, Russia on June 16, 2009.

• It was agreed to expand BRIC into BRICS with the inclusion of South Africa at the BRIC Foreign Ministers meeting in New York in September 2010. Accordingly, South Africa attended the third BRICS Summit in Sanya on April 14, 2011. 

• In 2014, the BRICS nations established the New Development Bank (NDB). It has an initial authorised capital of $100 billion and initial subscribed capital of $50 billion of which $10 billion is paid-in capital.

Expansion of BRICS

• BRICS leaders have left the door open to future enlargement as dozens more countries voiced interest in joining a grouping.

• Around 40 countries had shown interest in joining BRICS out of which 23 formally applied for the membership.

• In August 2023, the top BRICS leaders at the grouping’s summit in Johannesburg approved a proposal to admit six countries, including Argentina, into the bloc with effect from January 1, 2024. However, Argentina’s President Javier Milei announced withdrawing his country from becoming a member of the BRICS.

• The decision to expand the bloc is seen as an effort to reshape global governance while putting the voices of the Global South as a key priority area to advance the overall development agenda.

• Brazil assumed the presidency of BRICS on January 1, 2025.

Manorama Yearbook app is now available on Google Play Store and iOS App Store

Notes
Related Topics