India should quit the Brics

Arvind Subramanian is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. Josh Felman is a principal at JH Consulting

Modi
To Modi’s enormous credit, India has managed to move closer to the United States and Japan while also maintaining its relations with Russia
Arvind SubramanianJosh Felman
6 min read Last Updated : Sep 08 2023 | 8:47 AM IST
The world’s most powerful leaders will soon meet in New Delhi, heralding the culmination of India’s G20 presidency. While the G20 has delivered very little since its early successes following the 2008 global financial crisis, there are two reasons why the group’s coming summit still matters for India.
 
First, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has turned the G20 presidency into a major domestic issue by invol­ving all of India in the preparations. G20 posters featuring Modi are plast­ered across the country, signalling his intention to present India as a key play­er on the global stage. The more that Indians are persuaded their cou­n­t­ry is a vishwaguru (teacher to the world), the greater the ruling party’s chances in upcoming state elections and next year’s national elections.
 
Second, India now faces a big strat­egic choice, following the Brics’ (Braz­il, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) decision to add Saudi Arabia, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt, Argentina, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Until recently, the Brics was anomalous in design and ineffective (and thus harmless) in operation.
 
But Brics+ is more political in focus, more China-centric in leadership, and more anti-West in motivation. Its composition is shaping its character. The question for India, then, is whether it still makes sense to belong to such a grouping.
 
That answer is “probably not”, for three reasons. First, consider the eco­n­o­mics. The attraction of the original Brics (South Africa joined in 2010) lay in its members’ economic dynamism. Back in 2004, Brazil, Russia, India, and China were booming. But today, the Brics risks becoming a collective of fading stars. To be sure, many of the Brics still have high levels of wealth. In particular, China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE still have the resources needed to partner with and donate to poorer countries. But wealth alone is no guarantee of global economic influence. Just look at Japan. Developing and emerging economies aren’t particularly interested in a potential partner’s glorious past; they want to align with countries that are on the rise.
 
There is no doubt that the Brics of 2023 is much less dynamic than it was two decades ago. Gone are the days when China could effortlessly achieve 10 per cent annual growth. The economic model that produced those spectacular results has broken down, such that most analysts now expect secular growth of 3 per cent or less. Meanwhile, Russia has been in terminal decline for years — and now its war of aggression will enfeeble it further. Though Brazil is currently enjoying a boom on the back of higher commodity prices, it remains to be seen if its fortunes can be sustained.
 
As for the others, Argentina is teet­ering, yet again, on the edge of finan­cial collapse, and South Africa rem­ains saddled with astronomically high unemployment and profound gover­n­ance and fiscal challenges. Egypt needs support from the International Monetary Fund to ensure any semblance of macroeconomic stability, and even Saudi Arabia and the UAE are living on borrowed time: A concerted global push on climate change will leave them stranded with devalued hydrocarbon assets.
 

Also Read

In short, Brics+ comprises a bunch of economic has-beens. The big exce­p­tion is India, which is still growing ra­p­idly, with long-term prospects that have improved markedly in recent years. Since it no longer has much in common with the other Brics mem­b­ers, it should consider leaving — both for symbolic and practical reasons.
 
That brings us to the second big issue: politics. The new Brics+ shows every sign of becoming more political, and in ways that pose serious problems for India. For starters, its increasingly China-centric, anti-Western orientation runs counter to India’s longstanding principle of non-alignment. Maintaining equidistance from rival power blocs has always been a central tenet of Indian foreign policy, which it has upheld even in the face of Russia’s war on Ukraine.
 
To Modi’s enormous credit, India has managed to move closer to the United States and Japan while also maintaining its relations with Russia; it has also deepened its ties with Israel and forged better relations with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and especially the UAE. Is India prepared to jeopardise this success just to remain a member in good standing within the enlarged Brics+?
 
Moreover, apart from Argentina and Ethiopia, the new members are all autocracies, and this fact matters now that the group is becoming more polit­ical. Does India really want to belong to an authoritarian club? Notwith­standing its own political backsliding under Modi, it still counts democracy as its international calling card.
 
The third reason to quit the Brics concerns global governance. There is no longer any doubt that the US- and G7-led international order is unfit for purpose. After all, multilateral finan­cial institutions do not give nearly enough voice to rising powers; multi­lateral trade institutions have been undermined through unilateral protectionist measures; and interdependence itself has been weaponised in the name of US national security.
 
But even if India would prefer a new world order, its vision would not coincide with that of China, Russia, or Saudi Arabia.

Among other things, the other Brics members aspire to deth­r­one the US dollar as the world’s domi­n­ant currency, and to provide alter­na­tive development resources and em­ergency funding to poorer count­ries. But these objectives imply that a bet­ter world would be based on renminbi dominance, Belt and Road Initiative-type lending, and a greater reluctance among official creditors to write off debts when poor countries face crises.
 
These solutions are not obviously better than the status quo, and from India’s perspective, they are almost certainly worse. How would India benefit from replacing US dominance with Chinese dominance? By lending its weight to Brics+, it would become complicit in supporting China’s geopolitical aspirations.
 
Since India already eschewed membership in the China-centred Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, it would be rather odd for it to align with China in a quasi-political grouping. The feeling appears to be mutual: Chinese President Xi Jinping reportedly intends to skip the G20 summit.
 
That should make India’s choice easier. The G7 is outdated, and Brics+ is no alternative. Tedious and performative though it has become, the multilateralism of the G20 remains a sliver of hope in navigating a new world of fragmented disorder.
 
As an assertion of its emerging strength, India should leave the Brics. And, as a signal of its commitment to constructive alternatives, it should strive to make the G20 a success.
 
Arvind Subramanian is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. Josh Felman is a principal at 
JH Consulting. © Project Syndicate

More From This Section

Disclaimer: These are personal views of the writer. They do not necessarily reflect the opinion of www.business-standard.com or the Business Standard newspaper

Topics :BRICSG20 meetsChina

First Published: Sep 07 2023 | 10:58 PM IST

Next Story