The BRICS group of nations is growing, and its two-day summit will be held in the Russian city of Kazan on 22 October, where newcomers are set to attend for the first time. Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates will join the club, named after its original emerging market members: Brazil, Russia, India, and China and later joined by South Africa, completing the acronym 'BRICS'.
The expanding bloc, now known as BRICS+, will keep its name, but it is also seeking a bigger role on the international geopolitical scene. It is seen as providing a better representation of the issues affecting developing markets and the global south and will be closely watched across international politics for what its expansion will look like.
Russia, as the current chair of the group, has been particularly vocal ahead of the summit. President Vladimir Putin recently said: “As of today, more than 30 countries—more precisely, 34 states—have already expressed a desire to join the activities of our association in one form or another. Therefore, we have launched an active discussion with all BRICS participants on the modality of this new category of partner states, which will be approved in Kazan”.
Like the other major international events held in Russia since its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, the summit seeks to show the Western world that the Kremlin is not as isolated as some powers hoped it would be.
The numbers on show in Kazan will be significant. It will host 24 national leaders, with the number of national delegations reaching 32. They will include Nikol Pashinyan from Armenia and Ilham Aliyev from Azerbaijan, Russia’s so-called “near abroad”.
Other attendees look somewhat less predictable and reveal the growing influence underway: United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres and Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan stand out. With Turkey, a member of NATO, any move toward joining BRICS+ would be significant as Ankara seems keen on seeking a bigger role in the bloc.
China’s President Xi Jinping is expected to attend, alongside Brazil’s President Luiz Ignacio Lula Da Silva and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi in attendance. Iran’s newly elected President, Masoud Pezeshkian, will also be there.
Kazan will give Russia a high-profile platform to present its vision for rebalancing a world dominated by the West, especially through trade and financial transactions.
De-dollarisation
Russia’s Finance Minister Anton Siluanov has already spoken out. At a meeting of the bloc’s financial bodies earlier in October, he said: “The creation of an independent and sustainable payment and settlement infrastructure is a key element of the international monetary and financial system to strengthen the autonomy and financial sovereignty of the BRICS countries.
“Among the advantages of the proposals that we presented and worked on in BRICS this year is the creation of a fast, cheap, transparent and equally accessible mechanism with the minimisation of trade barriers.”
The group wants to end the dependence of international trade on the US currency, an overt policy known as de-dollarisation. Russia’s ambassador to South Africa, Ilya Rogachev, outlined the rationale:
“Because there are so many economic sanctions imposed by Western countries against BRICS members and other countries of the global south and global east, we can say that they have weaponised the dollar and the euro. So, the rest of the world is simply compelled to move away from these currencies in their exchanges.”
Moves away from the dollar driven by the BRICS+ nations have so far produced mixed results. There is continued discussion of some kind of common currency and a constant push for the greater use of local currencies in international trade.
In 2023, one-fifth of oil trade was reported to have taken place without the dollar, something that was unthinkable just a decade or two ago. Analyst Michael Corbin, who has tracked developments over alternative currencies, has said that “the threat of de-dollarisation and a digital BRICS currency do not appear imminent” but added: “There is no doubting the commitment, particularly by China and Russia, to the creation of an alternative to the existing financial architecture underpinned, as it is, by the dollar.”
Read more: Can a BRICS currency really compete with the US dollar?