Bigger BRICS: A New Road for a Disrupted World
Bigger BRICS: A New Road for a Disrupted World
Introduction: A Summit Amid Global Disruption
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The upcoming BRICS Summit in Rio de Janeiro (July 6–7, 2025) occurs against a backdrop of global turmoil — geopolitical conflicts, economic instability, and fractured multilateralism.
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As a platform of emerging economies, BRICS is uniquely positioned to offer alternative narratives and pathways for sustainable global growth and governance.
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For India, the summit holds strategic importance as it prepares to assume the BRICS Chair in 2026.
Evolution of BRICS: Growth and Expansion
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Formed in the early 21st century, BRICS has evolved into an agile, agenda-driven, and ambitious forum.
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It has surpassed the GDP of the G7, and is set to overtake its trade volume.
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The expansion of BRICS has introduced a broader, more diverse mix of members — politically, economically, and ideologically — making consensus more complex but also enhancing representation.
Clarifying the Narrative: Not Anti-West
a. Debunking the “Anti-West” Perception
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BRICS has been wrongly perceived as anti-West due to bilateral tensions between the West and members like China and Russia.
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The group’s expansion and engagement strategy shows it aims to supplement, not replace, global development partnerships.
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It seeks cooperation with the G7 and greater activity within the G20, where most BRICS members already participate.
De-dollarisation and Currency Realism
a. Currency Instability and Regional Alternatives
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Discussions on de-dollarisation stem from global currency imbalances and Bretton Woods system failures to include emerging economies.
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While local currency usage in trade and finance is expanding, the idea of a common BRICS currency is unrealistic.
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Instead, the group should advocate reforms through the G20 and other multilateral platforms.
Key Summit Themes and Deliverables
a. Inclusive Development and Global South Cooperation
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The summit theme centers on inclusive, sustainable governance for the Global South.
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Participation will include 10 member states, 12 partners, 8 invitees, and 7 multilateral institutions.
b. Anticipated Outcomes
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Statements are expected on:
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Global governance reform
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Artificial Intelligence governance
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Climate finance
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Disease elimination
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Rio Declaration
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Internal Challenges and Lack of Consensus
a. Global Governance Reform Stalemate
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Despite widespread support, BRICS has failed to make substantive progress on global governance reform due to Chinese resistance and divergent priorities of new members.
b. Peace and Security
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BRICS promotes diplomacy over conflict, but tensions (e.g., Russia-Ukraine, Iran’s involvement) could complicate peace declarations.
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A unified stand on counter-terrorism, especially after the Pahalgam terrorist attack, is likely.
Economic and Technological Cooperation
a. Trade, Investment, and Green Growth
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Collaboration has expanded in areas like trade, infrastructure, and technology.
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Climate action, green energy, and climate finance require more multilateral engagement.
b. Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation
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BRICS is aligning on AI for inclusive development and promoting global AI governance frameworks.
Leadership Dynamics and National Contributions
a. China’s Economic Dominance
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China leads BRICS economically and influences agenda-setting significantly.
b. India’s Developmental Approach
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India promotes Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), health initiatives, and capacity building.
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It emphasizes inclusive development and supply chain reliability.
c. Brazil’s Balanced Role
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As host, Brazil has worked to ensure consensus and focus on environment and geopolitics.
India’s Role in 2026: Leading Through Consensus
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India’s upcoming presidency offers a chance to:
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Advocate Global South priorities
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Promote technology-led development
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Support multilateral reform, even if delayed
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India’s economic strength and diplomatic balance can help build unity in an increasingly diverse BRICS.
Conclusion: A Road Forward for a Disrupted World
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The expanded BRICS faces internal diversity and external skepticism but remains vital to global stability.
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At Rio, the group must show unity in diversity, advocate reform, and guide a fractured world towards inclusive, multipolar governance.
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With India’s leadership on the horizon, there is hope that BRICS can evolve into a bridge-builder, not a bloc, in the shifting global order.
