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May 18, 2013
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A History of the World, BRIC by BRICPosted on Apr 26, 2012
By Pepe Escobar, TomDispatch This piece originally appeared at TomDispatch. Goldman Sachs—via economist Jim O’Neill—invented the concept of a rising new bloc on the planet: BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa). Some cynics couldn’t help calling it the “Bloody Ridiculous Investment Concept.” Not really. Goldman now expects the BRICS countries to account for almost 40% of global gross domestic product (GDP) by 2050, and to include four of the world’s top five economies. Soon, in fact, that acronym may have to expand to include Turkey, Indonesia, South Korea and, yes, nuclear Iran: BRIIICTSS? Despite its well-known problems as a nation under economic siege, Iran is also motoring along as part of the N-11, yet another distilled concept. (It stands for the next 11 emerging economies.) The multitrillion-dollar global question remains: Is the emergence of BRICS a signal that we have truly entered a new multipolar world? Advertisement The Group of Eight (G-8) is already increasingly irrelevant. The G-20, which includes the BRICS, might, however, prove to be the real thing. But there’s much to be done to cross that watershed rather than simply be swept over it willy-nilly: the reform of the U.N. Security Council, and above all, the reform of the Bretton Woods system, especially those two crucial institutions, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. On the other hand, willy-nilly may prove the way of the world. After all, as emerging superstars, the BRICS have a ton of problems. True, in only the last seven years Brazil has added 40 million people as middle-class consumers; by 2016, it will have invested another $900 billion—more than a third of its GDP—in energy and infrastructure; and it’s not as exposed as some BRICS members to the imponderables of world trade, since its exports are only 11% of GDP, even less than the U.S. Still, the key problem remains the same: lack of good management, not to mention a swamp of corruption. Brazil’s brazen new monied class is turning out to be no less corrupt than the old, arrogant, comprador elites that used to run the country. In India, the choice seems to be between manageable and unmanageable chaos. The corruption of the country’s political elite would make Shiva proud. Abuse of state power, nepotistic control of contracts related to infrastructure, the looting of mineral resources, real estate property scandals—they’ve got it all, even if India is not a Hindu Pakistan. Not yet anyway. Since 1991, “reform” in India has meant only one thing: unbridled commerce and getting the state out of the economy. Not surprisingly then, nothing is being done to reform public institutions, which are a scandal in themselves. Efficient public administration? Don’t even think about it. In a nutshell, India is a chaotic economic dynamo and yet, in some sense, not even an emerging power, not to speak of a superpower. Russia, too, is still trying to find the magic mix, including a competent state policy to exploit the country’s bounteous natural resources, extraordinary space, and impressive social talent. It must modernize fast as, apart from Moscow and St. Petersburg, relative social backwardness prevails. Its leaders remain uneasy about neighboring China (aware that any Sino-Russian alliance would leave Russia as a distinctly junior partner). They are distrustful of Washington, anxious over the depopulation of their eastern territories, and worried about the cultural and religious alienation of their Muslim population. Then again the Putinator is back as president with his magic formula for modernization: a strategic German-Russian partnership that will benefit the power elite/business oligarchy, but not necessarily the majority of Russians. Dead in the Woods The post-World War II Bretton Woods system is now officially dead, totally illegitimate, but what are the BRICS planning to do about it? At their summit in New Delhi in late March, they pushed for the creation of a BRICS development bank that could invest in infrastructure and provide them with back-up credit for whatever financial crises lie down the road. The BRICS know perfectly well that Washington and the European Union (EU) will never relinquish control of the IMF and the World Bank. Nonetheless, trade among these countries will reach an impressive $500 billion by 2015, mostly in their own currencies.
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By americanme, April 29, 2012 at 12:59 pm Link to this comment
Cliff:
Good post.
Every pig finally arrives on the Sunday dinner table.
Report thisBy Cliff Carson, April 29, 2012 at 6:26 am Link to this comment
Escobar put it plainly as a coming showdown against the American Empire:
“So this twenty-first century world of ours is shaping up right now largely as a confrontation between the U.S./NATO and the BRICS, warts and all on every side. The danger: that somewhere down the line it turns into a Full Spectrum Confrontation. Because make no mistake, unlike Saddam Hussein or Muammar Gaddafi, the BRICS will actually be able to shoot back.”
My worry for the future of America and our descendants has for some time been that America, as the bully of the world, will someday convince themselves that they are invincible.
What America needs to learn during its drunken Hegemony is that all bullies someday meet their match and life after that isn’t pretty.
The United States of America has been acting as the thief of the world and has failed to recognize that a rising tide of resentment is reaching the boiling point.
There are very few, can be counted on one hand, true friends of America, the pretend friend countries do so out of the fear of becoming victimized by the bully for not being a good toady.
These Faux friendships are tenuous and will end immediately once the new sheriff in town asserts itself.
And that Armageddon day is coming as sure as the sun is rising in the East.
The times now demand that we change willingly, instead of at the end of a bayonet.
World Peace is yet attainable but we have to want it instead of using conflict as a money making venture.
Report thisBy americanme, April 26, 2012 at 12:58 pm Link to this comment
It’s time folks took their heads out of the dark places where they have been hiding and face the music: Start with the samba. Brazil has knocked the UK out of the top 5 of world economies, and is going upward.
All BRIC economies are in the top 10.
European economies are on the downslide. As is the US.
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