Late last month, leaders from Brazil,
Russia, India, China and South Africa – the so-called BRICS – announced
they were forming their own development bank to assist other emerging
economies. The yet-to-be-named bank is expected to compete with the
World Bank and the International Monetary fund, two institutions with
power structures based firmly in the United States and Europe.
The
announcement also serves as yet another sign that the world economy is
quickly evolving to a place where United States global economic
dominance is being challenged by regional interests. Since the end of
World War II, the United States was the driver of global monetary
policy. When the Federal Reserve acted, the world listened and reacted.
Now,
according to officials from the BRICS nations, emerging countries are
trying to insulate themselves from the market shocks caused by the
United States and Europe. They no longer trust the West to do the right
thing. They’re forming their own “union” to create stability that the
World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the Fed have been unable
to provide.
The
bank, which is planning to raise $50 billion in capital, is expected to
open next year, according to Indian finance minister P. Chidambaram.
Other alliances around the world are also forming, portending the end of
Western economic dominance.
To be clear, these alliances are not monetary unions. They don’t
share a currency and therefore do not share fiscal policy. Yet they do
share the common belief that together, their developing economies can
foster and sustain growth. These alliances do more than simply
hedge against Western financial calamities. They encourage investors to
keep money in the region instead of sending it to western markets and
promote trade between member nations.
Even though many of these
alliances lack real teeth, their formation is important symbolically.
They give emerging economies a forum to show their strength, as well as
send a clear signal that in the future, the United States is not the
only game in town.
Rise of the BRICS
It did not take long for the BRICS to become a major
force on world markets. The leaders of these countries first met in
2006, but a formal alliance wasn’t made until 2009. South Africa joined
the group in 2010.
These countries now represent more than 3
billion people. They have a combined gross domestic product of $14.8
trillion, and hold $4 billion in foreign reserves.
The U.S.
economy is still the world’s largest, although experts agree that the
Chinese economy will grow larger by 2016. And while BRICS’ economic
growth has slowed in recent years, they weathered the global economic
slowdown far better than the United States and Europe.
In fact,
the new BRICS bank is likely the direct result of the Western response
to the crisis. The Fed, the European Central Bank, the World Bank and
the IMF all acted repeatedly to soften the blow of the crisis. Yet
strong growth, both here and in Europe, remains elusive.
According to a paper by Ritwik Banerjee and Pankaj Vashisht, published at the
height of the financial crisis,
the ability of the BRICS to sustain growth while Western economies were
contracting convinced the emerging nations that a rebalancing of global
economic power was necessary.
“The erstwhile engine of global
growth, the USA, was weakening and the new growth poles were emerging,”
they wrote. BRICS were “one of [the] emerging growth poles that caught
the imagination of the world.”
BRICS Not Alone
In the wake of the global financial crisis, other
countries are seeking alliances that will make them less reliant on the
West. During the financial crisis, Japan, China and South Korea created a
$120 billion emergency loan fund to shore up
Asian nations’ finances. The Association of Southeast Asian nations, comprised of 10 countries from that part of the world, is also experiencing a
period of robust growth.
New
partnerships are also emerging closer to home. Álvaro Uribe, former
president of Colombia, recently told The Fiscal Times that his country
is considering entering into a formal economic alliance with Mexico,
Peru and Chile, creating a bloc with a GDP of $2.2 trillion. These
countries have already agreed to eliminate trade tariffs on 90 percent
of the
goods exchanged between them.
But
the biggest challenge to U.S. dominance remains in Asia. The Pentagon
is shifting its strategy to confront potential rivals in that part of
the world. And U.S. companies are gaining ground in huge consumer
markets in China, Indonesia and Malaysia.
Even the National
Basketball Association recognizes that the key to future success is
breaking the Asian market. It has spent $1.5 billion on a sports and
entertainment
complex outside of Beijing, and has sent
Chinese-American star Jeremy Lin on a tour of the country.
"We
are at a critical juncture in human history, which could lead to widely
contrasting futures," Christopher Kojm, National Intelligence Council
chair wrote in a
recent intelligence appraisal. "By 2030, Asia will be well on its way to returning to being the world's powerhouse, just as it was before 1500."
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