Ahead of the summit of the Group of 20 industrialised and major emerging economies, Prime Minister Singh had emphasised the need for an "orderly exit" from unconventional monetary policies being pursued by the developed world to avoid "damaging" growth prospects of the developing world.
With the five countries in the BRICS bloc hard hit by slow economic growth, host Russia and China, articulated their concerns about the planned 'tapering' of the US Federal Reserve multi-billion dollar monetary stimulus policy.
Zhu Guangyao, China's deputy finance minister, asked the US to be "mindful" of the spillover effects and work to contribute to the stability of the global financial markets and the steady recovery of the global economy.
However, he appeared to rule out the possibility of a bailout for any country in any financial difficulty. BRICS comprises of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.
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India, has not approached the other BRICS countries despite issuing a public appeal last week for joint forex intervention after the rupee rout, Russia's summit coordinator Ksenia Yudayeva said.
"We didn't agree on specific measures yet," Yudayeva told a separate briefing, adding that the picture would be clearer when G20 finance ministers meet again in October.
"The countries that have faced the biggest recent capital outflows also have quite weak fundamentals," she said, suggesting that both domestic and international factors were at play in the most troubled economies.