New Global Order: Nigeria Missing As Argentina, Ethiopia, UAE, Egypt 3 Others Join BRICS
The BRICS bloc of top emerging economies have taken a major step in expanding its frontier and influence with the announcement that six more nations have been invited join as new members.
Nigeria, the most populous black nation in Africa and the world, is not yet among the new members.
The Daily Crucible learnt from watchers of the development that the strength of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the countries that have successfully applied and invited to join BRICS may have placed that of Nigeria lower down the curve and possibly the reason the new emerging economic bloc has not deemed it fit to invite Nigeria to join the group.
According to Al Jazeera, Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have been invited to join as full members from January 1 next year.
The bloc, which was formed in 2009 with Brazil, Russia, India and China, first expanded to admit South Africa in 2010.
Interests of the Global South on the worldâs agenda.
Before the start of its annual summit in South Africa this week, more than 40 countries had expressed interest in joining BRICS, and 23 formally applied to join.
âWe appreciate the considerable interest shown by countries of the Global South in membership of BRICS,â the bloc said in the Johannesburg II declaration it adopted on the final day of the summit on Thursday.
It said the six were selected after âBRICS countries reached consensus on the guiding principles, standards, criteria and procedures of the BRICS expansion processâ â but did not provide more details about the specific criteria.
Significant statesâ
âIt is hard to find commonalities among the six countries invited to join BRICS other than that they are each significant states in their region,â Danny Bradlow, a professor with the Centre for the Advancement of Scholarship at the University of Pretoria, told Al Jazeera.
With the inclusion of Saudi Arabia, Iran, UAE and Egypt, âyou could argue itâs very Middle East centricâ, according to Sanusha Naidu, a senior research fellow at the Institute for Global Dialogue, a South African think tank focusing on China and Africa.
âThis has geo-economic, geo-strategic and geo-political implications,â Naidu argued, saying the latest additions will push some BRICS nations to think more about their Middle-East policies, and for China and India to beef the existing policies.
China recently brokered the re-establishment of ties between Saudi Arabia and Iran, a role that would traditionally have been filled by a country like the United States.
India recently signed an agreement with the UAE to trade in Indian rupees and Emirati dirhams instead of in the US dollar.
Crucially, Naidu argued, the expansion list is âvery energy centricâ, adding that following the announcement, some analysts at the venue even facetiously commented if they should âcall it BRICS plus OPEC?â.
When selecting new members, the bloc may have taken into consideration the pricing of energy products, and how their countries can reduce their liability and vulnerability in terms of the cost of oil, she said.
âBesides Russia, all of [the core BRICS countries] are non-energy producing countries. They need to be able to make their economies function, but they donât want to get caught in the secondary collateral damage of sanctions,â she explained.
The use of âunilateral sanctionsâagainst countries and the continued dominance of the US dollar in global trade is something BRICS has vocally challenged.
The expansion âopens up new avenues for tradeâ, said Karin Costa Vasquez, a non-resident senior fellow at the Center for China and Globalization in Beijing.
One of the aims behind the planned expansion is âcreating opportunities for BRICS nations to trade more easily with one another using local currenciesâ, Vasquez added
âThis shift could increase the potential for using currencies other than the US dollar, particularly by creating a network of countries that enhances the utility of their respective currencies.â
INCLUSION
Analysts have said that one of the countries that could benefit from a trading regime outside of dollar dominance is Iran.
âIran will clearly benefit the most,â said Naâeem Jeenah, a senior researcher at the South African think tank, Mapungupwe Institute for Strategic Reflection.
He said its inclusion âhighlights the fact that itâs not as politically isolated as the US wants it to beâ.
Inclusion could also be an âeconomic lifelineâ due to increased bilateral trade.
âMembers would start trading with each other in their own currencies. For Iran, this would be great,â he said.
Jeenah added that Argentina was a âshoe-inâ as its inclusion was championed by Brazil, China and India. Among the African states, he said analysts expected Algeria, which has oil reserves, or Nigeria, which is the continentâs most populous country and leading economy, could have been included.
Cheta Nwanze, a partner at SBM Intelligence, a geopolitical advisory that focuses on West Africa, said of Nigeriaâs exclusion, âI think itâs an indictment of our foreign policy, or the lack of it thereof. We used to be very pan-African in our foreign policy, that has changedâ.
âOne thing that is very clear is that most of the rest of Africa â with the exception of maybe Nigeria and Kenya â are moving away from the West and towards the East. We are sticking in the Western camp without saying it explicitly, but more importantly without getting any benefits from being in the Western camp,â he told Al Jazeera.
Jeenah said the inclusion of Ethiopia, a country with one of the fastest-growing economies, that also hosts the headquarters of the African Union, âmakes sense in those termsâ.
Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE are similar to India and, to some degree, South Africa, in that âthese are countries that have one foot in BRICS and another foot in the Westâ, Jeenah said.
But Saudi Arabia, in particular, is âpositioningâ itself in a way that shows it is not just in the American camp.
They have other options now and are going to leverage these options,â he said, such as the China-brokered agreement to restore ties with Iran.
Your problems are not our problemsâ
Analysts have remained undecided on what an expanded BRICS says to the West and means for the current global order, however.
âThe grouping now represents a larger share of the worldâs population and economy. However, this only means that the group is potentially a powerful voice for reform of the arrangements for global governance and a powerful actor in these arrangements,â Bradlow said.
âWhether it actually becomes such a voice will depend on whether the expanded group is more effective than the BRICS have been in forging agreements on how the arrangements for global governance should be reformed and how they can more effectively serve the interests of the whole Global South.â
Naidu noted that âhaving Iran in the BRICS sends a massive powerful message to the G7, to the Global North, to Washingtonâ.
âIt says, âYou can have a problem with them, weâll keep them here.â And it also says, âYour problems are not our problems.ââ
She remarked that South Africa, which has important ties with the US, may have to deal with the âfalloutâ and navigate some of these tensions. But she also wondered whether the country could use the fact that it is in the bloc to its advantage.
âYes, they donât have the economic muscle to do what they want to do, but they have the strategic muscle to say âI have the BRICS behind me now, I have a wall of BRICS.ââ
Jeenah said, âWe must be careful about attributing more importance to this expansion development than it actually has ⌠it certainly does not make BRICS into a Global South front. Itâs just a club of 11 members.â
However, he added that, as yet, BRICS has not been trying act as a political forum, but that could change.
âMore scary [for the West] than the six who were chosen is that 40 expressed interest in joining,â he said. âBRICS is engaging in incremental expansion ⌠So where does it go in 30 years time?
âWhile hype of de-dollarisation isnât on the horizon, the fact is that in a few years time, two of three largest economies in the world could be trading with each other within the [BRICS] bloc without the US dollar, that would be cause for some concern.â
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA