"The pen is mightier than the sword." For nearly a decade, Brahm has used newspaper articles, magazines and authored over 20 books to explain current affairs, reshape stalled negotiations, and provide a communication platform to Asian leaders and policymakers. His writings reveal underlying central challenges facing Asia over the past decades.

Fellow Bric road

Written by Laurence Brahm - Published by South China Morning Post on 06/30/2009

The tectonic plates of our global financial system shifted when Brazil, Russia, India and China – known by their
acronym Bric – held their first standalone meeting in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg on June 16. Did the Bric
meeting echo the Bandung conference of non-aligned developing nations in 1965? Unlike Bandung, Bric was not about broad political vision in a post-colonial era but, rather, coping with a global financial crisis in the post-Washington Consensus era.

Bric represents the emergence of a new consensus, often between unrelated nations drawn into an alliance to address specific issues or crises. In this case, it was the search for pragmatic alternatives to the US dollar as the only global reserve currency.

It began when China’s central banker Zhou Xiaochuan called on the International Monetary Fund to expand the basket of special drawing rights (SDRs) earlier this year. He was soon echoed by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s chief economic aide, Arkady Dvorkovich. And, in the run-up to the summit, Mr Medvedev said: “The existing set of reserve currencies, including the US dollar, have failed to perform their functions.” Mr
Dvorkovich called on the basket of SDRs to include commodity currencies such as the yuan, rouble, Australian and Canadian dollars, plus gold.

On the second day of the summit, the US dollar fell sharply, indicating that the Bric nations had found the magic power of making the dollar ride a roller coaster with only a few words.

The important point is that this summit of Bric leaders was not just about talk, but action. They proposed investing their reserves in each other’s currencies, settling bilateral trade in domestic currencies and striking currency-swap agreements. It was even suggested to include the five central Asian states of Kazakhstan,
Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan within the framework of using the yuan as a settlement currency, which some point to as an attempt to create a miniature European-Union type of arrangement in Central Asia.

While it may still be premature to adopt a global currency, as suggested by some economists such as Joseph
Stiglitz, the idea does seem to have some momentum. “The Bric countries can lead the world towards global
monetary stability by supporting the researching and planning for the next global currency to replace the US
dollar,” said Morrison Bonpasse, president of the Single Global Currency Association, a US think
tank. Mr Bonpasse believes that “when such a single global currency supports a number of countries with 40-50 per cent of the world’s GDP, the ‘tipping point’ will have been reached, and other countries will join quickly”.

The trajectory is clear. Bric nations already account for 50 per cent of world growth, based on purchasing parity power. While collectively their gross domestic product amounts to only 14.6 percent, within 20 years, it is estimated that it will reach 50 per cent. Their collective populations account for 42 per cent of the world’s
total. Goldman Sachs now predicts that, in 20 years, the four could, together, dwarf the Group of Seven leading industrial nations, and that China’s economy will overtake that of the US in size.

Critics argue that the four have nothing in common culturally, while deep-rooted political suspicions remain imbedded between China and its neighbours India and Russia. They say their economic bases are different: Brazil’s is agricultural, China’s, manufacturing, Russia’s, commodities, and India’s, outsourcing.

But what has brought them together is one common interest – the search for alternatives to the US dollar as the global reserve currency and, with it, their opposition to the domination of the global financial order by a single nation.

The Bric meeting may only be a beginning but it represents a fundamental shift in our global financial system. It showed that countries with different values and systems can put aside those differences and work to solve a problem in innovative ways.

Laurence Brahm is a global activist, international mediator, political columnist and author. He is the leading advocate of a fresh development paradigm - The Himalayan Consensus - an innovative approach to development.

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