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The BRICS remain a bad bet

National flags of BRICS countries.

National flags of BRICS countries.

Li Qingsheng/VCG via Reuters
Senior Writer
“China and developing nations are today the main defenders of the multilateral system,” Celso Amorim, a longtime senior foreign policy adviser to Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, told the Financial Times this week. “As the United States steps back from multilateralism, from the economic and social order which they themselves created after the second world war, the space for the BRICS increases,” he added, referencing the grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China and others that periodically offers itself as an alternative to Western leadership.

Advocates of the BRICS have made this case before – and the return of Donald Trump as US president with the rollout of his trade war on US friends and foes alike has given them new momentum.

But, given their sharply differing political systems and economic models, the BRICS group will never share common views on democracy, free trade, and rule of law as the G7 Group of industrialized countries – the US, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Canada – has done. Nor are their interests aligned. China and India, for example, are more rivals than allies.

This reality will continue to limit the BRICS’ ability and willingness to take on the costs and risks that come with bolstering the international system of security and investment.

In short, Trump’s “America First” foreign and trade policies have created a vacuum in global leadership, but the BRICS remain too internally divided over basic questions to fill it.