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Wikipedia

BRIC

BRIC is a term describing the foreign investment strategies grouping acronym that stands for Brazil, Russia, India, and China. The separate BRICS organisation would go on to become a political and economic organization largely based on such grouping.[1]

Map of BRIC countries

BRIC

Brazil
Russia
India
China

  • Total : $49.967 trillion (2022)
  • China $30.177 trillion
  • India $11.745 trillion
  • Russia $4.365 trillion
  • Brazil $3.680 trillion
  • Total : $27.107 trillion (2022)
  • China $19.911 trillion
  • India $3.534 trillion
  • Brazil $1.833 trillion
  • Russia $1.829 trillion
  • Total : 38,464,219 km2 (2018 estimate)
  • Russia 17,098,250 km2
  • China 9,562,910 km2
  • Brazil 8,515,770 km2
  • India 3,287,259 km2
  • Total : 3,157,441,470 (2022 estimate)
  • China 1,412,600,000
  • India 1,373,761,011
  • Brazil 214,890,459
  • Russia 147,190,000
Successor – BRICS

The term was first coined by economist Jim O'Neill and later championed by his employer Goldman Sachs in 2001. O'Neill identified the four countries as rising economic powers which were at a similar stage of newly advanced economic development. Goldman Sachs, of which O'Neill was the head of global economics research, would continue reporting and investing in their BRIC fund until 2015.[2] The grouping is typically rendered as "the BRIC", "the BRIC countries", "the BRIC economies", or alternatively as the "Big Four".[3][4][5][6]

The acronym was co-opted by the countries themselves beginning in the late-2000s. The 1st BRIC summit in 2009, which founded the BRICS organisation, was held between the leaders of the four countries, with later summits involving South Africa beginning in 2010.[7][8] O'Neill commented on the 2010 summit by drawing a distinction between his BRIC term and the BRICS organisation, arguing that South Africa was too small as an economy to join the BRIC ranks.[9]

Thesis edit

Jim O'Neill, a global economist at Goldman Sachs at the time, proposed that the economic potential of Brazil, Russia, India and China is such that they could become among the most dominant economies by 2050.[10] These countries encompass over 25% of the world's land coverage and 40% of the world's population and hold a combined GDP (PPP) of $20 trillion. On almost every scale, they would be the largest entity on the global stage. These four countries are among the biggest and fastest-growing emerging markets.{Incal 2011}

They have taken steps to increase their political cooperation, mainly as a way of influencing the United States position on major trade accords, or, through the implicit threat of political cooperation, as a way of extracting political concessions from the United States, such as the proposed nuclear cooperation with India.[11]

"Dreaming with BRICS: The Path to 2050" (2003) edit

The BRIC thesis recognizes that Brazil, Russia, India and China have changed their political systems to embrace global capitalism.[12] Goldman Sachs predicts that China and India, respectively, will become the dominant global suppliers of manufactured goods and services, while Brazil and Russia will become similarly dominant as suppliers of raw materials. Of the four countries, Brazil remains the only polity that can continue all elements, meaning manufacturing, services, and resource supplying simultaneously. Cooperation is thus hypothesized to be a logical next step among the BRICs because Brazil and Russia together form the logical commodity suppliers.

In 2016, an economist from Australia predicted that in 2050, based on Gross Domestic Product per capita spending, China will be the first and followed by India and the United States. Indonesia which nowadays does not belong to BRIC countries will jump from 9th position to 4th position. And Brazil will be in the fifth position. It is due to the global economic center is shifting from the Atlantic to the Asia Pacific region.[13]

Follow-up report (2004) edit

The Goldman Sachs global economics team released a follow-up report to its initial BRIC study in 2004.[14] The report states that in BRIC nations, the number of people with an annual income over a threshold of $3,000 will double in number within three years and reach 800 million people within a decade. This predicts a massive rise in the size of the middle class in these nations. In 2025, it is calculated that the number of people in BRIC nations earning over $15,000 may reach over 200 million people. This indicates that a huge pickup in demand will not be restricted to basic goods but impact higher-priced goods as well. According to the report, first China and then a decade later India will begin to dominate the world economy.

Yet despite the balance of growth swinging so decisively towards the BRIC economies, the average level of individuals in the more advanced economies will continue to far outstrip the BRIC economic average for the foreseeable future.

The report also highlights India's inefficient energy consumption and mentions the dramatic under-representation of these economies in the global capital markets. The report also emphasizes the enormous populations that exist within the BRIC nations, which makes it relatively easy for their aggregate wealth to eclipse the G6, while per-capita income levels remain far below the norm of today's industrialized countries. This phenomenon, too, will affect world markets as multinational corporations will attempt to take advantage of the enormous potential markets in the BRICs by producing, for example, far cheaper automobiles and other manufactured goods affordable to the consumers within the BRICs in lieu of the luxury models that currently bring the most income to automobile manufacturers. India and China have already started making their presence felt in the service and manufacturing sector respectively in the global arena. Developed economies of the world have already taken serious note of this fact.

(2007) Second Follow-up report edit

This report compiled by lead authors Tushar Poddar and Eva Yi gives insight into "India's Rising Growth Potential". It reveals updated projection figures attributed to the rising growth trends in India over the last four years. Goldman Sachs asserts that "India's influence on the world economy will be bigger and quicker than implied in our previously published BRICs research". They noted significant areas of research and development, and expansion that is happening in the country, which will lead to the prosperity of the growing middle-class.[15]

India has 10 of the 30 fastest-growing urban areas in the world. Based on current trends, an estimated a massive 700 million people will move to cities by 2050. This will have significant implications for demand for urban infrastructure, real estate, and services.[15]

In the revised 2007 figures, based on increased and sustaining growth, more inflows into foreign direct investment, Goldman Sachs predicts that "from 2007 to 2020, India's GDP per capita in US$ terms will quadruple", and that the Indian economy will surpass the United States (in US$) by 2043.[15] At the same time, the report indicated that Russia, while continuing its dominance of the European energy market, would continue to struggle economically, as its population declines.

"EM Equity in Two Decades: A Changing Landscape" (2010) edit

According to a 2010 report from Goldman Sachs, China might surpass the United States in equity market capitalization terms by 2030 and become the single largest equity market in the world.[16] By 2020, America's GDP might be only slightly larger than China's GDP. Together, the four BRICs may account for 41% of the world's market capitalization by 2030, the report said.[17] In late 2010, China surpassed Japan's GDP for the first time, with China's GDP standing at $5.88 trillion compared to Japan's $5.47 trillion. China thus became the world's second-largest economy after the United States.[18]

According to The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) based on International Monetary Fund figures, in 2012 Brazil has become the sixth-biggest economy in the world by overtaking United Kingdom with $2.52 trillion and $2.48 trillion, respectively. In 2010, the Brazilian economy was worth $2.09 trillion and UK with $2.25 trillion. Significant increase is caused by Brazilian economic boom on high food and oil prices.[19] Since the beginning of the Great Recession, in Q3 2013 economy of Brazil contracted by 0.5 percent from the previous quarter as the first contraction since Q1 2009.[20]

After Standard & Poor's (S&P) stated that India's growth outlook could deteriorate if policymaking and governance do not improve, in June 2012 Fitch Ratings cut its credit outlook to negative from stable with maintained its BBB− rating, the lowest investment-grade rating. A week before Fitch released the rating, S&P said India could become the first of the BRIC countries to lose investment-grade status.[21]

For the year 2013, China for the first time surpassed $4 trillion of world trade and become as world's largest trading country, consist of: export $2.21 trillion and import $1.95 trillion. While the United States for 11 months of 2013 world trade figure totaling $3.5 trillion and seems cannot beat China. China world trade balance in 2013 surplus by almost $260 billion a 12.8 percent increased from last year.[22]

Goldman Sachs has quietly closed down its BRIC fund after lost 88 percent of its asset value since 2010, instead channeling the fund into emerging markets countries. Historically, Jim O'Neill, the inventor of the term "BRIC," was the former chief economist of Goldman Sachs. The head of emerging markets for Morgan Stanley Investment Management, Ruchir Sharma, has released a book in 2012: Breakout Nations which mentioned that it is hard to sustain rapid growth for more than a decade.[2]

Based on a March 2011 Forbes report, the BRIC countries counted 301 billionaires among their combined populations, exceeding the number of billionaires in Europe, which stood at 300 in 2011.[23]

Statistics edit

 
Proportion of world (countries with data) nominal GDP for the countries with the top 10 highest nominal GDP in 2018, from 1980 to 2018 with IMF projections until 2024. Countries marked with an asterisk are non-G8 countries.[24]

A Goldman Sachs paper published in December 2005 explained why Mexico was not included in the original BRICs.[25] The Economist publishes an annual table of socio-economic national statistics in its "Pocket World in Figures".[citation needed] Extrapolating the global rankings from their 2008 Edition for the BRIC countries and economies in relation to various categories provides an interesting touchstone in relation to the economic underpinnings of the BRIC thesis. It also illustrates how, despite their divergent economic bases, the economic indicators are remarkably similar in global rankings between the different economies. It also suggests that, while economic arguments can be made for linking Mexico into the BRIC thesis, the case for including South Korea looks considerably weaker.

General statistics edit

Statistics
Categories Brazil Russia India China
Area 005th 001st 007th 003rd
Population 005th 009th 001st 002nd
Population growth rate 128th 177th 098th 148th
Labor force 005th 006th 002nd 001st
GDP (nominal) 008th 010th 05th 002nd
GDP (PPP) 007th 006th 003rd 001st
GDP (nominal) per capita 057th 047th 139th 086th
GDP (PPP) per capita 075th 055th 126th 094th
GDP (real) growth rate 0180th 0177th 003rd 0012th
Human Development Index 085th 055th 114th 0101st
Exports 06th 08th 012th 001st
Imports 021st 017th 08th 002nd
Current account balance 0187th 005th 186th 002nd
Received FDI 013th 016th 019th 004th
Foreign exchange reserves 0010th 006th 009th 001st
External debt 020th 021st 022nd 012th
Public debt 042nd 0190th 0104th 0184th
Electricity consumption 009th 004th 003rd 001st
Renewable energy source 003rd 005th 006th 001st
Number of mobile phones 004th 005th 002nd 001st
Number of internet users 005th 006th 002nd 001st
Motor vehicle production 009th 015th 005th 001st
Military expenditures 011th 004th 05th 002nd
Active troops 015th 005th 002nd 001st
UN Peacekeepers 024th 0077th 003rd 009th
Rail network 010th 003rd 004th 002nd
Road network 004th 007th 002nd 003rd

Goldman Sachs prediction edit

 
Projection of the ten largest economies in the world to 2050, measured in GDP (billions of 2006 USD), according to Goldman Sachs in 2007[26]
Gross Domestic Product in 2006 US$ billions[26]
Rank 2050 Country 2050 2045 2040 2035 2030 2030 USDA[27] 2025 2020 2015 2010 2006 Percent increase from 2006 to 2050
1 China 70,710 57,310 45,022 34,348 25,610 22,200 18,437 12,630 8,133 4,667 2,682 2536%
2 India 38,668 25,278 16,510 10,514 6,683 6,600 4,316 2,848 1,900 1,256 909 4043%
3 United States 38,514 33,904 29,823 26,097 22,817 24,800 20,087 17,978 16,194 14,535 13,245 190%
4 Brazil 11,366 8,740 6,631 4,963 3,720 4,000 2,831 2,194 1,720 2,087 1,064 968%
5 Mexico 9,340 7,204 5,471 4,102 3,068 2,300 2,303 1,742 1,327 1,009 851 997%
6 Russia 8,580 7,420 6,320 5,265 4,265 2,400 3,341 2,554 1,900 1,371 982 773%

Note: All data above is from Goldman Sachs, except the 2030 USDA column is data from U.S. Department of Agriculture (2030 USDA) about World's 20 Largest Economies in 2030, but only 16 match with Goldman Sachs data. In 2030 USDA, Mexico and Indonesia will topple South Korea (please see Section Proposed inclusions). There is no South Africa of BRIC S in the above table. In 2030, the sole country from Africa is Nigeria and the US is still number one, but China almost overtakes the US.

Gross Domestic Product per capita (real)[26]
Rank 2050 Country 2050 2045 2040 2035 2030 2025 2020 2015 2010 2006 Percent increase from 2006 to 2050
1 United States 91,683 83,489 76,044 69,019 62,717 57,446 53,502 50,200 47,014 44,379 106%
2 South Korea 90,294 75,979 63,924 53,449 44,602 36,813 29,868 26,012 21,602 18,161 397%
3 United Kingdom 79,234 73,807 67,391 61,049 55,904 52,220 49,173 45,591 41,543 38,108 107%
4 Russia 78,435 65,708 54,221 43,800 34,368 26,061 19,311 13,971 9,833 6,909 1,037%
5 Canada 76,002 69,531 63,464 57,728 52,663 48,621 45,961 43,449 40,541 38,071 99%
6 France 75,253 68,252 62,136 56,562 52,327 48,429 44,811 41,332 38,380 36,045 108%
7 Germany 68,253 62,658 57,118 51,710 47,263 45,033 43,223 40,589 37,474 34,588 97%
8 Japan 66,846 60,492 55,756 52,345 49,975 46,419 42,385 38,650 36,194 34,021 96%
9 Mexico 63,149 49,393 38,255 29,417 22,694 17,685 13,979 11,176 8,972 7,918 697%
10 Italy 58,545 52,760 48,070 44,948 43,195 41,358 38,990 35,908 32,948 31,123 88%
11 Brazil 49,759 38,149 29,026 21,924 16,694 12,996 10,375 8,427 6,882 5,657 779%
12 China 49,650 39,719 30,951 23,511 17,522 12,688 8,829 5,837 3,463 2,041 2,332%
13 Turkey 45,595 34,971 26,602 20,046 15,188 11,743 9,291 7,460 6,005 5,545 722%
14 Vietnam 33,472 23,932 16,623 11,148 7,245 4,583 2,834 1,707 1,001 655 5,010%
15 Iran 32,676 26,231 20,746 15,979 12,139 9,328 7,345 5,888 4,652 3,768 767%
16 Indonesia 22,395 15,642 10,784 7,365 5,123 3,711 2,813 2,197 1,724 1,508 1,385%
17 India 20,836 14,446 9,802 6,524 4,360 2,979 2,091 1,492 1,061 817 2,450%
18 Pakistan 20,500 14,025 9,443 6,287 4,287 3,080 2,352 1,880 1,531 1,281 1,500%
19 Philippines 20,388 14,260 9,815 6,678 4,635 3,372 2,591 2,075 1,688 1,312 1,453%
20 Nigeria 13,014 8,934 6,117 4,191 2,944 2,161 1,665 1,332 1,087 919 1,316%
21 Egypt 11,786 7,066 5,183 3,775 2,744 2,035 1,568 1,260 897 778 808%
22 Bangladesh 5,235 3,767 2,698 1,917 1,384 1,027 790 627 510 427 1,125%
Gross Domestic Product in 2006 US$ billions[26]
Groups Countries 2050 2045 2040 2035 2030 2025 2020 2015 2010 2006
BRICS Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa 128,324 98,757 74,483 55,090 40,278 28,925 20,226 13,653 8,640 5,637
G7 Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United Kingdom, US 66,039 59,475 53,617 48,281 43,745 39,858 36,781 33,414 30,437 28,005

The following three tables are lists of economies by incremental GDP from 2006 to 2050 by Goldman Sachs. They illustrate that the BRICs and N11 nations are replacing G7 nations as the main contributors to the world's economic growth. From 2020 to 2050, nine of the ten largest countries by incremental GDP are occupied by the BRICs and N11 nations, in which the United States remains to be the only G7 member as one of the three biggest contributors to the global economic growth.[26]

List of Economies by Incremental Nominal GDP from 2006 to 2020
Rank Country Incremental GDP in billions of 2006 US$
1 China 9,948
2 United States 4,733
3 India 1,939
4 Russia 1,572
5 Brazil 1,130
6 Mexico 891
7 Japan 888
8 United Kingdom 791
9 Germany 668
10 Italy 635
11 France 621
11 South Korea 621
13 Canada 440
14 Indonesia 402
15 Turkey 350
16 Iran 299
17 Vietnam 218
18 Nigeria 185
19 Philippines 172
20 Pakistan 139
21 Egypt 128
22 Bangladesh 87
List of Economies by Incremental Nominal GDP from 2020 to 2035
Rank Country Incremental GDP in billions of 2006 US$
1 China 21,718
2 United States 8,119
3 India 7,666
4 Brazil 2,769
5 Russia 2,711
6 Mexico 2,360
7 Indonesia 1,440
8 South Korea 1,136
9 Turkey 976
10 Vietnam 896
11 United Kingdom 836
12 Nigeria 777
13 France 752
14 Iran 729
15 Japan 662
16 Canada 602
17 Philippines 593
18 Germany 529
18 Egypt 502
20 Pakistan 441
21 Bangladesh 301
22 Italy 220
List of economies by incremental nominal GDP from 2035 to 2050
Rank Country Incremental GDP in billions of 2006 US$
1 China 36,362
2 India 27,154
3 United States 12,417
4 Brazil 6,403
5 Mexico 5,238
6 Indonesia 4,818
7 Nigeria 3,557
8 Russia 3,315
9 Vietnam 2,438
10 Turkey 2,227
11 Philippines 2,128
12 Egypt 1,884
13 South Korea 1,439
14 Iran 1,390
15 Pakistan 1,376
16 United Kingdom 1,196
17 France 1,025
18 Bangladesh 1,015
19 Germany 976
20 Canada 847
21 Japan 791
22 Italy 506

At the World Economic Forum 2011, there were 365 corporate executives from BRIC and other emerging nations out of 1000 participants. It was a record number of executives from emerging markets. Nomura Holdings Inc's co-head of global investment banking said that "It's a reflection of where economic power and influence is starting to move." The International Monetary Fund estimated emerging markets might expand 6.5 percent in 2011, more than double the 2.5 percent rate for developed countries. BRIC's takeover made record by 22 percent of global deals or increase by 74 percent in one year and more than quadrupled in the last five years.[28]

According to The World Bank Doing Business report 2019 the BRIC economies introduced a total of 21 reforms, with getting electricity and trading across borders the most common areas of improvement.[29]

History edit

 
The BRIC leaders in 2010

The BRIC alliance has its roots in the Russia-India-China (RIC) strategic triangle, which was envisaged by Russian prime minister Yevgeny Primakov in the 1990s.

Various sources refer to a purported "original" BRIC agreement that predates the Goldman Sachs thesis. Some of these sources claim that President Vladimir Putin of Russia was the driving force behind this original cooperative coalition of developing BRIC countries. However, thus far, no text has been made public of any formal agreement to which all four BRIC states are signatories. This does not mean, however, that they have not reached a multitude of bilateral or even quadrilateral agreements. Evidence of agreements of this type are abundant and are available on the foreign ministry websites of each of the four countries. Trilateral agreements and frameworks made among the BRICs include the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (member states include Russia and China, observers include India) and the IBSA Trilateral Forum, which unites Brazil, India, and South Africa in annual dialogues. Also important to note is the G-20 coalition of developing states which includes all the BRICs.

In an August 2010 op-ed, Jim O'Neill of Goldman Sachs argued that Africa could be considered the next BRIC.[30] Analysts from rival banks have sought to move beyond the BRIC concept, by introducing their own groupings of emerging markets. Proposals include CIVETs (Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa), the EAGLES (Emerging and Growth-Leading Economies) and the 7 percent club (which includes those countries which have averaged economic growth of at least 7 percent a year).[31]

South Africa sought BRIC membership since 2009 and the process for formal admission began as early as August 2010.[32] South Africa was officially admitted as a BRIC nation on December 24, 2010, after being invited by China and the other BRIC countries to join the group.[33] The capital "S" in BRICS stands for South Africa. President Jacob Zuma attend the BRICS summit in Sanya in April 2011 as a full member. South Africa stands at a unique position to influence African economic growth and investment. According to Jim O'Neill of Goldman Sachs who originally coined the term, Africa's combined current gross domestic product is reasonably similar to that of Brazil and Russia, and slightly above that of India.[34] South Africa is a "gateway" to Southern Africa and Africa in general as the most developed African country.[34] China is South Africa's largest trading partner, and India wants to increase commercial ties with Africa.[8] South Africa is also Africa's largest economy, but as number 31 in global GDP economies it is far behind its new partners.[8]

Jim O'Neill expressed surprise when South Africa joined BRIC since South Africa's economy is a quarter of the size of Russia's (the least economically powerful BRIC nation).[35] He believed that the potential was there but did not anticipate inclusion of South Africa at this stage.[34] Martyn Davies, a South African emerging markets expert, argued that the decision to invite South Africa made little commercial sense but was politically astute given China's attempts to establish a foothold in Africa. Further, South Africa's inclusion in BRICS may translate to greater South African support for China in global fora.[35] He has great belief that the "S" in "BRICS" could be replaced eventually by SADC.

African credentials are important geopolitically, giving BRICS a four-continent breadth, influence and trade opportunities.[8] South Africa's addition is a deft political move that further enhances BRICS' power and status.[8] In the original essay that coined the term, Goldman Sachs did not argue that the BRICs would organize themselves into an economic bloc, or a formal trading association which this move signifies.[citation needed]

Marketing edit

 
The São Paulo Stock Exchange is the third-largest exchange operator by market value in the world.[36]

The BRIC term is also used by companies who refer to the four named countries as key to their emerging markets strategies. By comparison, the reduced acronym IC would not be attractive, although the term "Chindia" is often used. BRIC's study specifically focuses on large countries, not necessarily the wealthiest or the most productive and was never intended to be an investment thesis. If investors read Goldman's research carefully and agreed with the conclusions, then they would gain exposure to Asian debt and equity markets rather than to Latin America. According to estimates provided by the USDA, the wealthiest regions outside of the G6 in 2015 will be Hong Kong, South Korea and Singapore. Combined with China and India, these five economies are likely to be the world's five most influential economies outside of the G6.

On the other hand, when the "R" in BRIC is extended beyond Russia and is used as a loose term to include all of Eastern Europe as well, then the BRIC story becomes more compelling. At issue are the multiple serious problems which confront Russia (potentially unstable government, environmental degradation, critical lack of modern infrastructure, etc.[citation needed]), and the comparatively much lower growth rate seen in Brazil. However, Brazil's lower growth rate obscures the fact that the country is wealthier than China or India on a per-capita basis, has a more developed and global integrated financial system and has an economy potentially more diverse than the other BRICs due to its raw material and manufacturing potential. Many other Eastern European countries, such as Poland, Romania, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, and several others were able to continually sustain high economic growth rates and do not experience some of the problems that Russia experiences or experience them to a lesser extent. In terms of GDP per capita in 2008, Brazil ranked 64th, Russia 42nd, India 113th, and China 89th. By comparison, South Korea ranked 24th and Singapore 3rd.

Brazil's stock market, the Bovespa, has gone from approximately 9,000 in September 2002 to over 70,000 in May 2008. Government policies have favored investment (lowering interest rates), retiring foreign debt and expanding growth, and a reformulation of the tax system is being voted in the congress. The British author and researcher Mark Kobayashi-Hillary wrote a book in 2007 titled Building a Future with BRICs for European publisher Springer Verlag that examines the growth of the BRICs region and its effect on global sourcing. Contributors to the book include Nandan Nilekani, and Shiv Nadar.

International law edit

Brazilian lawyer and author Adler Martins has published a paper called "Contratos Internacionais entre os países do BRIC"[37] (International Agreements Among BRIC countries) which highlights the international conventions ratified by the BRIC countries, which allow them to maintain trade and investment activities safely within the group. Martin's study is being further developed by the Federal University of the Minas Gerais State, in Brazil.

Financial diversification edit

It has been argued that geographic diversification would eventually generate superior risk-adjusted returns for long-term global investors by reducing overall portfolio risk while capturing some of the higher rates of return offered by the emerging markets of Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America.[38] By doing so, these institutional investors have contributed to the financial and economic development of key emerging nations such as Brazil, India, China, and Russia. For global investors, India and China constitute both large-scale production platforms and reservoirs of new consumers, whereas Russia is viewed essentially as an exporter of oil and commodities- Brazil and Latin America being somehow "in the middle".

Criticism edit

Academics and experts have suggested that China is in a league of its own compared to the other BRIC countries.[39] As David Rothkopf wrote in Foreign Policy, "Without China, the BRICs are just the BRI, a bland, soft cheese that is primarily known for the whine [sic] that goes with it. China is the muscle of the group and the Chinese know it. They have effective veto power over any BRIC initiatives because without them, who cares really? They are the one with the big reserves. They are the biggest potential market. They are the U.S. partner in the G2 (imagine the coverage a G2 meeting gets vs. a G8 meeting) and the E2 (no climate deal without them) and so on."[40] Deutsche Bank Research said in a report that "economically, financially and politically, China overshadows and will continue to overshadow the other BRICs". It added that China's economy is larger than that of the three other BRIC economies (Brazil, Russia, and India) combined. Moreover, China's exports and its official foreign-exchange reserves are more than twice as large as those of the other BRICs combined.[41] In that perspective, some pension investment experts have argued that "China alone accounts for more than 70% of the combined GDP growth generated by the BRIC countries [from 1999 to 2010]: if there is a BRIC miracle it's first and foremost a Chinese one".[42] The "growth gap" between China and other large emerging economies such as Brazil, Russia and India can be attributed to a large extent to China's early focus on ambitious infrastructure projects: while China invested roughly 9% of its GDP on infrastructure in the 1990s and 2000s, most emerging economies invested only 2% to 5% of their GDP. This considerable spending gap allowed the Chinese economy to grow at near-optimal conditions while many South American and South Asian economies suffered from various development bottlenecks (poor transportation, aging power grids, mediocre schools).[43]

Other critics suggest that BRIC is nothing more than a neat acronym for the four largest emerging market economies,[citation needed] but in economic and political terms nothing else (apart from the fact that they are all big emerging markets) links the four. Two are manufacturing-based economies and big importers (China and India), but two are huge exporters of natural resources (Brazil and Russia). The Economist, in its special report on Brazil, expressed the following view: "In some ways, Brazil is the steadiest of the BRICs. Unlike China and Russia, it is a full-blooded democracy; unlike India, it has no serious disputes with its neighbors. It is the only BRIC without a nuclear bomb". The Heritage Foundation's Indices of Economic Freedom, which measures factors such as protection of property rights and free trade ranks Brazil "moderately free" above the other BRICs, which are ranked as "mostly unfree".[44] Henry Kissinger has stated that the BRIC nations have no hope of acting together as a coherent bloc in world affairs and that any cooperation will be the result of forces acting on the individual nations.[citation needed]

In a not-so-subtle dig critical of the term as nothing more than a shorthand for emerging markets generally, critics have suggested a correlating term, CEMENT (Countries in Emerging Markets Excluded by New Terminology). Whilst they accept there has been spectacular growth of the BRIC economies, these gains have largely been the result of the strength of emerging markets generally, and that strength comes through having BRICs and CEMENT.[45]

Based on IMF's World Economic Outlook Database, October 2016, the top economies in 2021 (by projected nominal gross domestic product (GDP)) are going to be China, the U.S., India, Japan, Germany, Russia, Indonesia, Brazil, the U.K., and France respectively.[46] Nowadays Indonesia is not BRIC country, but as solely emerging economies in the list sets on seven in projected 2021 top economies. There are no South Africa and no (South Korea, Mexico, (GCC Arab countries—Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates), Eastern Europe and Turkey) as mentioned above.

Proposed inclusions edit

Mexico and South Korea are currently the world's 13th and 15th largest by nominal GDP just behind the BRIC and G7 economies. Both are experiencing rapid GDP growth of 5% every year, a figure comparable to Brazil from the original BRICs. Jim O'Neill, expert from the same bank and creator of the economic thesis, stated that in 2001 when the paper was created, it did not consider Mexico, but today it has been included because the country is experiencing the same factors that the other countries first included present.[47][48] While South Korea was not originally included in the BRICs, recent solid economic growth led to Goldman Sachs proposing to add Mexico and South Korea to the BRICs, changing the acronym to BRIMCK, with Jim O'Neill pointing out that Korea "is better placed than most others to realize its potential due to its growth-supportive fundamentals".[49] Again Jim O'Neil recently created the term MIKT that stands for Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea, and Turkey.[50]

A Goldman Sachs paper published later in December 2005 explained why Mexico and South Korea were not included in the original BRICs. According to the paper,[25] among the other countries they looked at, only Mexico and South Korea have the potential to rival the BRICs, but they are economies that they decided to exclude initially because they looked to them as already more developed. However, due to the popularity of the Goldman Sachs thesis, "BRIMC" and "BRICK" are becoming more generic marketing terms to refer to these six countries. Because of the popularity of the Goldman Sachs thesis "BRIC", this term has sometimes been extended whereby "BRICK"[51][52] (K for South Korea) and "BRIMC"[47][48] (M for Mexico) refer to these proposed expansions. Other proposed groupings include "BRICA" (GCC Arab countries—Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates)[53] and "BRICET" (including Eastern Europe and Turkey)[54] and have become more generic marketing terms to refer to these emerging markets.

In their paper "BRICs and Beyond", Goldman Sachs stated that "Mexico, the four BRIC countries and South Korea should not be really thought of as emerging markets in the classical sense", adding that they are a "critical part of the modern globalised economy" and "just as central to its functioning as the current G7".[55]

The term is primarily used in the economic and financial spheres as well as in academia. Its usage has grown specially in the investment sector, where it is used to refer to the bonds emitted by these emerging markets governments.[56][57][58]

Mexico edit

 
Mexico City

Primarily, along with the BRICs,[59] Goldman Sachs argues that the economic potential of Brazil, Russia, India, Mexico and China is such that they may become (with the United States) the six most dominant economies by 2050. Due to Mexico's rapidly advancing infrastructure, increasing middle class and rapidly declining poverty rates it is expected to have a higher GDP per capita than all but three European countries by 2050, this newfound local wealth also contributes to the nation's economy by creating a large domestic consumer market which in turn creates more jobs.

Mexico in 2050[60]
GDP in USD $9.340 trillion
GDP per capita $63,149
GDP growth (2015–2050) 4.0%
Total population 142 million

South Korea edit

South Korea is one of the world's most highly developed countries and including it with developing countries like the BRICs is not deemed correct. However, commentators such as William Pesek from Bloomberg argue that Korea is "Another 'BRIC' in Global Wall", suggesting that it stands out from the Next Eleven economies with its BRIC-like growth rate, despite its Human Development Index being higher than some of the world's most advanced economies, including France, UK, Austria, Denmark, Finland and Belgium. South Korean workers are the wealthiest among major Asian countries, with a higher income than Japan and the strongest growth rate in the OECD. More importantly, it has a significantly higher Growth Environment Score (Goldman Sachs' way of measuring the long-term sustainability of growth) than all of the BRICs or N-11s.[55] According to the IMF, South Korea's GDP measured by purchasing power parity is already larger than Canada and Spain. In terms of GDP per capita (PPP), South Korea overtook Spain in 2010. According to Citibank, South Korea will continue by overtaking Germany, Britain, Australia and Sweden by 2020, surpassing Canada, Switzerland, Netherlands and Norway by 2030 and taking over the United States by 2040 to become the world's wealthiest major economy. While measuring the South Korean economy by nominal GDP is inaccurate as the South Korean won is artificially kept low to boost exports, IMF predicts South Korea's nominal GDP and GDP per capita will surpass Spain in 2015. Economists from other investment firms argue that even when measured by nominal GDP per capita, South Korea will achieve over $145,000 in 2040, surpassing the United States, suggesting that wealth is more important than size for bond investors, stating that Korea's credit rating will be rated AAA sooner than 2050.[61]

United Korea edit

In September 2009, Goldman Sachs published its 188th Global Economics Paper named "A United Korea?" which highlighted in detail the potential economic power of a United Korea, which will surpass all current G7 countries except the United States and Japan within 30–40 years of reunification, estimating GDP to surpass $6 trillion by 2050.[62] The young, skilled labor and large amount of natural resources from the North combined with advanced technology, infrastructure and large amount of capital in the South, as well as Korea's strategic location connecting three economic powers, is likely going to create an economy larger than the bulk of the G7. According to some opinions, a reunited Korea could occur before 2050.[63] If it occurred, Korean reunification would immediately raise the country's population to over 70 million.[64]

Korea in 2050[65]
  United Korea   South Korea   North Korea
GDP in USD $6.056 trillion $4.073 trillion $1.982 trillion
GDP per capita $86,000 $96,000 $70,000
GDP growth (2015–2050) 4.8% 3.9% 11.4%
Total population 71 million 42 million 28 million

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Elder, Miriam, and Leahy, Joe, et al., Who's who: Bric leaders take their place at the top table, Financial Times, London, September 25, 2008
  • Firzli, M. Nicolas, "Forecasting the Future: The BRICs and the China Model", JTW/ USAK Research Center, Mar 9 2011
  • Kateb, Alexandre, Les nouvelles puissances mondiales. Pourquoi les BRIC changent le monde" (The new global powers. Why the BRIC change the world) (in French), Paris : Ellipses, 2011, 272 p.  ISBN 978-2-7298-6473-6
  • O'Neill, Jim, BRICs could point the way out of the Economic Mire, Financial Times, London, September 23, 2008, p. 28.
  • Mark Kobayashi-Hillary, 'Building a Future with BRICs: The Next Decade for Offshoring' (Nov 2007). ISBN 978-3-540-46453-2.
  • James D. Sidaway (2012) 'Geographies of Development: New Maps, New Visions?', The Professional Geographer, 64:1, 49–62.
  • J. Vercueil, Les pays émergents. Brésil-Russie-Inde-Chine... Mutations économiques et nouveaux défis (Emerging Countries. Brazil – Russia – India – China... Economic Transformations and new Challenges) (in French), Paris : Bréal, 2010, 207 p. ISBN 978-2-7495-0957-0
  • Paulo Borba Casella, "BRIC : Brésil, Russie, Inde, Chine et Afrique du Sud – A l'heure d'un nouvel ordre juridique international, éd. A.Pedone, Paris, Sept. 2011, EAN ISBN 978-2-233-00626-4

External links edit

  • The Sino-Brazilian Principles in a Latin American and BRICS Context: The Case for Comparative Public Budgeting Legal Research Wisconsin International Law Journal, 13 May 2015
  • Centre for Rising Powers, University of Cambridge
  • Russian President Putin planning to glue together the most powerful superpower coalition in the world 2013-05-14 at the Wayback Machine
  • Putin: The Father of BRIC
  • The Creation of Clubs: The BRIC
  • Gorbachev, Not O'Neill, Deserves BRIC Credit
  • Insights on the Iran deal, BRICS and handling a crisis in Venezuela

bric, confused, with, other, uses, disambiguation, been, suggested, that, this, article, merged, into, discuss, proposed, since, december, 2023, term, describing, foreign, investment, strategies, grouping, acronym, that, stands, brazil, russia, india, china, s. Not to be confused with BRICS For other uses see BRIC disambiguation It has been suggested that this article be merged into BRICS Discuss Proposed since December 2023 BRIC is a term describing the foreign investment strategies grouping acronym that stands for Brazil Russia India and China The separate BRICS organisation would go on to become a political and economic organization largely based on such grouping 1 Map of BRIC countriesBRIC Brazil Russia India ChinaGDP PPP Total 49 967 trillion 2022 China 30 177 trillionIndia 11 745 trillionRussia 4 365 trillionBrazil 3 680 trillion GDP nominal Total 27 107 trillion 2022 China 19 911 trillionIndia 3 534 trillionBrazil 1 833 trillionRussia 1 829 trillion Area Total 38 464 219 km2 2018 estimate Russia 17 098 250 km2China 9 562 910 km2Brazil 8 515 770 km2India 3 287 259 km2 Population Total 3 157 441 470 2022 estimate China 1 412 600 000India 1 373 761 011Brazil 214 890 459Russia 147 190 000Successor BRICSThe term was first coined by economist Jim O Neill and later championed by his employer Goldman Sachs in 2001 O Neill identified the four countries as rising economic powers which were at a similar stage of newly advanced economic development Goldman Sachs of which O Neill was the head of global economics research would continue reporting and investing in their BRIC fund until 2015 2 The grouping is typically rendered as the BRIC the BRIC countries the BRIC economies or alternatively as the Big Four 3 4 5 6 The acronym was co opted by the countries themselves beginning in the late 2000s The 1st BRIC summit in 2009 which founded the BRICS organisation was held between the leaders of the four countries with later summits involving South Africa beginning in 2010 7 8 O Neill commented on the 2010 summit by drawing a distinction between his BRIC term and the BRICS organisation arguing that South Africa was too small as an economy to join the BRIC ranks 9 Contents 1 Thesis 1 1 Dreaming with BRICS The Path to 2050 2003 1 2 Follow up report 2004 1 3 2007 Second Follow up report 1 4 EM Equity in Two Decades A Changing Landscape 2010 2 Statistics 2 1 General statistics 2 2 Goldman Sachs prediction 3 History 3 1 Marketing 3 2 International law 3 3 Financial diversification 3 4 Criticism 4 Proposed inclusions 4 1 Mexico 4 2 South Korea 4 2 1 United Korea 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksThesis editJim O Neill a global economist at Goldman Sachs at the time proposed that the economic potential of Brazil Russia India and China is such that they could become among the most dominant economies by 2050 10 These countries encompass over 25 of the world s land coverage and 40 of the world s population and hold a combined GDP PPP of 20 trillion On almost every scale they would be the largest entity on the global stage These four countries are among the biggest and fastest growing emerging markets Incal 2011 They have taken steps to increase their political cooperation mainly as a way of influencing the United States position on major trade accords or through the implicit threat of political cooperation as a way of extracting political concessions from the United States such as the proposed nuclear cooperation with India 11 Dreaming with BRICS The Path to 2050 2003 edit The BRIC thesis recognizes that Brazil Russia India and China have changed their political systems to embrace global capitalism 12 Goldman Sachs predicts that China and India respectively will become the dominant global suppliers of manufactured goods and services while Brazil and Russia will become similarly dominant as suppliers of raw materials Of the four countries Brazil remains the only polity that can continue all elements meaning manufacturing services and resource supplying simultaneously Cooperation is thus hypothesized to be a logical next step among the BRICs because Brazil and Russia together form the logical commodity suppliers In 2016 an economist from Australia predicted that in 2050 based on Gross Domestic Product per capita spending China will be the first and followed by India and the United States Indonesia which nowadays does not belong to BRIC countries will jump from 9th position to 4th position And Brazil will be in the fifth position It is due to the global economic center is shifting from the Atlantic to the Asia Pacific region 13 Follow up report 2004 edit The Goldman Sachs global economics team released a follow up report to its initial BRIC study in 2004 14 The report states that in BRIC nations the number of people with an annual income over a threshold of 3 000 will double in number within three years and reach 800 million people within a decade This predicts a massive rise in the size of the middle class in these nations In 2025 it is calculated that the number of people in BRIC nations earning over 15 000 may reach over 200 million people This indicates that a huge pickup in demand will not be restricted to basic goods but impact higher priced goods as well According to the report first China and then a decade later India will begin to dominate the world economy Yet despite the balance of growth swinging so decisively towards the BRIC economies the average level of individuals in the more advanced economies will continue to far outstrip the BRIC economic average for the foreseeable future The report also highlights India s inefficient energy consumption and mentions the dramatic under representation of these economies in the global capital markets The report also emphasizes the enormous populations that exist within the BRIC nations which makes it relatively easy for their aggregate wealth to eclipse the G6 while per capita income levels remain far below the norm of today s industrialized countries This phenomenon too will affect world markets as multinational corporations will attempt to take advantage of the enormous potential markets in the BRICs by producing for example far cheaper automobiles and other manufactured goods affordable to the consumers within the BRICs in lieu of the luxury models that currently bring the most income to automobile manufacturers India and China have already started making their presence felt in the service and manufacturing sector respectively in the global arena Developed economies of the world have already taken serious note of this fact 2007 Second Follow up report edit This report compiled by lead authors Tushar Poddar and Eva Yi gives insight into India s Rising Growth Potential It reveals updated projection figures attributed to the rising growth trends in India over the last four years Goldman Sachs asserts that India s influence on the world economy will be bigger and quicker than implied in our previously published BRICs research They noted significant areas of research and development and expansion that is happening in the country which will lead to the prosperity of the growing middle class 15 India has 10 of the 30 fastest growing urban areas in the world Based on current trends an estimated a massive 700 million people will move to cities by 2050 This will have significant implications for demand for urban infrastructure real estate and services 15 In the revised 2007 figures based on increased and sustaining growth more inflows into foreign direct investment Goldman Sachs predicts that from 2007 to 2020 India s GDP per capita in US terms will quadruple and that the Indian economy will surpass the United States in US by 2043 15 At the same time the report indicated that Russia while continuing its dominance of the European energy market would continue to struggle economically as its population declines EM Equity in Two Decades A Changing Landscape 2010 edit According to a 2010 report from Goldman Sachs China might surpass the United States in equity market capitalization terms by 2030 and become the single largest equity market in the world 16 By 2020 America s GDP might be only slightly larger than China s GDP Together the four BRICs may account for 41 of the world s market capitalization by 2030 the report said 17 In late 2010 China surpassed Japan s GDP for the first time with China s GDP standing at 5 88 trillion compared to Japan s 5 47 trillion China thus became the world s second largest economy after the United States 18 According to The National Institute of Economic and Social Research NIESR based on International Monetary Fund figures in 2012 Brazil has become the sixth biggest economy in the world by overtaking United Kingdom with 2 52 trillion and 2 48 trillion respectively In 2010 the Brazilian economy was worth 2 09 trillion and UK with 2 25 trillion Significant increase is caused by Brazilian economic boom on high food and oil prices 19 Since the beginning of the Great Recession in Q3 2013 economy of Brazil contracted by 0 5 percent from the previous quarter as the first contraction since Q1 2009 20 After Standard amp Poor s S amp P stated that India s growth outlook could deteriorate if policymaking and governance do not improve in June 2012 Fitch Ratings cut its credit outlook to negative from stable with maintained its BBB rating the lowest investment grade rating A week before Fitch released the rating S amp P said India could become the first of the BRIC countries to lose investment grade status 21 For the year 2013 China for the first time surpassed 4 trillion of world trade and become as world s largest trading country consist of export 2 21 trillion and import 1 95 trillion While the United States for 11 months of 2013 world trade figure totaling 3 5 trillion and seems cannot beat China China world trade balance in 2013 surplus by almost 260 billion a 12 8 percent increased from last year 22 Goldman Sachs has quietly closed down its BRIC fund after lost 88 percent of its asset value since 2010 instead channeling the fund into emerging markets countries Historically Jim O Neill the inventor of the term BRIC was the former chief economist of Goldman Sachs The head of emerging markets for Morgan Stanley Investment Management Ruchir Sharma has released a book in 2012 Breakout Nations which mentioned that it is hard to sustain rapid growth for more than a decade 2 Based on a March 2011 Forbes report the BRIC countries counted 301 billionaires among their combined populations exceeding the number of billionaires in Europe which stood at 300 in 2011 23 Statistics edit nbsp Proportion of world countries with data nominal GDP for the countries with the top 10 highest nominal GDP in 2018 from 1980 to 2018 with IMF projections until 2024 Countries marked with an asterisk are non G8 countries 24 A Goldman Sachs paper published in December 2005 explained why Mexico was not included in the original BRICs 25 The Economist publishes an annual table of socio economic national statistics in its Pocket World in Figures citation needed Extrapolating the global rankings from their 2008 Edition for the BRIC countries and economies in relation to various categories provides an interesting touchstone in relation to the economic underpinnings of the BRIC thesis It also illustrates how despite their divergent economic bases the economic indicators are remarkably similar in global rankings between the different economies It also suggests that while economic arguments can be made for linking Mexico into the BRIC thesis the case for including South Korea looks considerably weaker General statistics edit Statistics Categories Brazil Russia India ChinaArea 00 5th 00 1st 00 7th 00 3rdPopulation 00 5th 00 9th 00 1st 00 2ndPopulation growth rate 128th 177th 0 98th 148thLabor force 00 5th 00 6th 00 2nd 00 1stGDP nominal 00 8th 0 10th 0 5th 00 2ndGDP PPP 00 7th 00 6th 00 3rd 00 1stGDP nominal per capita 0 57th 0 47th 139th 0 86thGDP PPP per capita 0 75th 0 55th 126th 0 94thGDP real growth rate 0 180th 0 177th 00 3rd 00 12thHuman Development Index 0 85th 0 55th 114th 0 101stExports 0 6th 0 8th 0 12th 00 1stImports 0 21st 0 17th 0 8th 00 2ndCurrent account balance 0 187th 00 5th 186th 00 2ndReceived FDI 0 13th 0 16th 0 19th 00 4thForeign exchange reserves 00 10th 00 6th 00 9th 00 1stExternal debt 0 20th 0 21st 0 22nd 0 12thPublic debt 0 42nd 0 190th 0 104th 0 184thElectricity consumption 00 9th 00 4th 00 3rd 00 1stRenewable energy source 00 3rd 00 5th 00 6th 00 1stNumber of mobile phones 00 4th 00 5th 00 2nd 00 1stNumber of internet users 00 5th 00 6th 00 2nd 00 1stMotor vehicle production 00 9th 0 15th 00 5th 00 1stMilitary expenditures 0 11th 00 4th 0 5th 00 2ndActive troops 0 15th 00 5th 00 2nd 00 1stUN Peacekeepers 0 24th 00 77th 00 3rd 00 9thRail network 0 10th 00 3rd 00 4th 00 2ndRoad network 00 4th 00 7th 00 2nd 00 3rdGoldman Sachs prediction edit nbsp Projection of the ten largest economies in the world to 2050 measured in GDP billions of 2006 USD according to Goldman Sachs in 2007 26 Gross Domestic Product in 2006 US billions 26 Rank 2050 Country 2050 2045 2040 2035 2030 2030 USDA 27 2025 2020 2015 2010 2006 Percent increase from 2006 to 20501 China 70 710 57 310 45 022 34 348 25 610 22 200 18 437 12 630 8 133 4 667 2 682 2536 2 India 38 668 25 278 16 510 10 514 6 683 6 600 4 316 2 848 1 900 1 256 909 4043 3 United States 38 514 33 904 29 823 26 097 22 817 24 800 20 087 17 978 16 194 14 535 13 245 190 4 Brazil 11 366 8 740 6 631 4 963 3 720 4 000 2 831 2 194 1 720 2 087 1 064 968 5 Mexico 9 340 7 204 5 471 4 102 3 068 2 300 2 303 1 742 1 327 1 009 851 997 6 Russia 8 580 7 420 6 320 5 265 4 265 2 400 3 341 2 554 1 900 1 371 982 773 Note All data above is from Goldman Sachs except the 2030 USDA column is data from U S Department of Agriculture 2030 USDA about World s 20 Largest Economies in 2030 but only 16 match with Goldman Sachs data In 2030 USDA Mexico and Indonesia will topple South Korea please see Section Proposed inclusions There is no South Africa of BRIC S in the above table In 2030 the sole country from Africa is Nigeria and the US is still number one but China almost overtakes the US Gross Domestic Product per capita real 26 Rank 2050 Country 2050 2045 2040 2035 2030 2025 2020 2015 2010 2006 Percent increase from 2006 to 20501 United States 91 683 83 489 76 044 69 019 62 717 57 446 53 502 50 200 47 014 44 379 106 2 South Korea 90 294 75 979 63 924 53 449 44 602 36 813 29 868 26 012 21 602 18 161 397 3 United Kingdom 79 234 73 807 67 391 61 049 55 904 52 220 49 173 45 591 41 543 38 108 107 4 Russia 78 435 65 708 54 221 43 800 34 368 26 061 19 311 13 971 9 833 6 909 1 037 5 Canada 76 002 69 531 63 464 57 728 52 663 48 621 45 961 43 449 40 541 38 071 99 6 France 75 253 68 252 62 136 56 562 52 327 48 429 44 811 41 332 38 380 36 045 108 7 Germany 68 253 62 658 57 118 51 710 47 263 45 033 43 223 40 589 37 474 34 588 97 8 Japan 66 846 60 492 55 756 52 345 49 975 46 419 42 385 38 650 36 194 34 021 96 9 Mexico 63 149 49 393 38 255 29 417 22 694 17 685 13 979 11 176 8 972 7 918 697 10 Italy 58 545 52 760 48 070 44 948 43 195 41 358 38 990 35 908 32 948 31 123 88 11 Brazil 49 759 38 149 29 026 21 924 16 694 12 996 10 375 8 427 6 882 5 657 779 12 China 49 650 39 719 30 951 23 511 17 522 12 688 8 829 5 837 3 463 2 041 2 332 13 Turkey 45 595 34 971 26 602 20 046 15 188 11 743 9 291 7 460 6 005 5 545 722 14 Vietnam 33 472 23 932 16 623 11 148 7 245 4 583 2 834 1 707 1 001 655 5 010 15 Iran 32 676 26 231 20 746 15 979 12 139 9 328 7 345 5 888 4 652 3 768 767 16 Indonesia 22 395 15 642 10 784 7 365 5 123 3 711 2 813 2 197 1 724 1 508 1 385 17 India 20 836 14 446 9 802 6 524 4 360 2 979 2 091 1 492 1 061 817 2 450 18 Pakistan 20 500 14 025 9 443 6 287 4 287 3 080 2 352 1 880 1 531 1 281 1 500 19 Philippines 20 388 14 260 9 815 6 678 4 635 3 372 2 591 2 075 1 688 1 312 1 453 20 Nigeria 13 014 8 934 6 117 4 191 2 944 2 161 1 665 1 332 1 087 919 1 316 21 Egypt 11 786 7 066 5 183 3 775 2 744 2 035 1 568 1 260 897 778 808 22 Bangladesh 5 235 3 767 2 698 1 917 1 384 1 027 790 627 510 427 1 125 Gross Domestic Product in 2006 US billions 26 Groups Countries 2050 2045 2040 2035 2030 2025 2020 2015 2010 2006BRICS Brazil Russia India China South Africa 128 324 98 757 74 483 55 090 40 278 28 925 20 226 13 653 8 640 5 637G7 Canada France Germany Italy Japan United Kingdom US 66 039 59 475 53 617 48 281 43 745 39 858 36 781 33 414 30 437 28 005The following three tables are lists of economies by incremental GDP from 2006 to 2050 by Goldman Sachs They illustrate that the BRICs and N11 nations are replacing G7 nations as the main contributors to the world s economic growth From 2020 to 2050 nine of the ten largest countries by incremental GDP are occupied by the BRICs and N11 nations in which the United States remains to be the only G7 member as one of the three biggest contributors to the global economic growth 26 List of Economies by Incremental Nominal GDP from 2006 to 2020 Rank Country Incremental GDP in billions of 2006 US 1 China 9 9482 United States 4 7333 India 1 9394 Russia 1 5725 Brazil 1 1306 Mexico 8917 Japan 8888 United Kingdom 7919 Germany 66810 Italy 63511 France 62111 South Korea 62113 Canada 44014 Indonesia 40215 Turkey 35016 Iran 29917 Vietnam 21818 Nigeria 18519 Philippines 17220 Pakistan 13921 Egypt 12822 Bangladesh 87 List of Economies by Incremental Nominal GDP from 2020 to 2035 Rank Country Incremental GDP in billions of 2006 US 1 China 21 7182 United States 8 1193 India 7 6664 Brazil 2 7695 Russia 2 7116 Mexico 2 3607 Indonesia 1 4408 South Korea 1 1369 Turkey 97610 Vietnam 89611 United Kingdom 83612 Nigeria 77713 France 75214 Iran 72915 Japan 66216 Canada 60217 Philippines 59318 Germany 52918 Egypt 50220 Pakistan 44121 Bangladesh 30122 Italy 220 List of economies by incremental nominal GDP from 2035 to 2050 Rank Country Incremental GDP in billions of 2006 US 1 China 36 3622 India 27 1543 United States 12 4174 Brazil 6 4035 Mexico 5 2386 Indonesia 4 8187 Nigeria 3 5578 Russia 3 3159 Vietnam 2 43810 Turkey 2 22711 Philippines 2 12812 Egypt 1 88413 South Korea 1 43914 Iran 1 39015 Pakistan 1 37616 United Kingdom 1 19617 France 1 02518 Bangladesh 1 01519 Germany 97620 Canada 84721 Japan 79122 Italy 506At the World Economic Forum 2011 there were 365 corporate executives from BRIC and other emerging nations out of 1000 participants It was a record number of executives from emerging markets Nomura Holdings Inc s co head of global investment banking said that It s a reflection of where economic power and influence is starting to move The International Monetary Fund estimated emerging markets might expand 6 5 percent in 2011 more than double the 2 5 percent rate for developed countries BRIC s takeover made record by 22 percent of global deals or increase by 74 percent in one year and more than quadrupled in the last five years 28 According to The World Bank Doing Business report 2019 the BRIC economies introduced a total of 21 reforms with getting electricity and trading across borders the most common areas of improvement 29 History edit nbsp The BRIC leaders in 2010The BRIC alliance has its roots in the Russia India China RIC strategic triangle which was envisaged by Russian prime minister Yevgeny Primakov in the 1990s Various sources refer to a purported original BRIC agreement that predates the Goldman Sachs thesis Some of these sources claim that President Vladimir Putin of Russia was the driving force behind this original cooperative coalition of developing BRIC countries However thus far no text has been made public of any formal agreement to which all four BRIC states are signatories This does not mean however that they have not reached a multitude of bilateral or even quadrilateral agreements Evidence of agreements of this type are abundant and are available on the foreign ministry websites of each of the four countries Trilateral agreements and frameworks made among the BRICs include the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation member states include Russia and China observers include India and the IBSA Trilateral Forum which unites Brazil India and South Africa in annual dialogues Also important to note is the G 20 coalition of developing states which includes all the BRICs In an August 2010 op ed Jim O Neill of Goldman Sachs argued that Africa could be considered the next BRIC 30 Analysts from rival banks have sought to move beyond the BRIC concept by introducing their own groupings of emerging markets Proposals include CIVETs Colombia Indonesia Vietnam Egypt Turkey and South Africa the EAGLES Emerging and Growth Leading Economies and the 7 percent club which includes those countries which have averaged economic growth of at least 7 percent a year 31 South Africa sought BRIC membership since 2009 and the process for formal admission began as early as August 2010 32 South Africa was officially admitted as a BRIC nation on December 24 2010 after being invited by China and the other BRIC countries to join the group 33 The capital S in BRICS stands for South Africa President Jacob Zuma attend the BRICS summit in Sanya in April 2011 as a full member South Africa stands at a unique position to influence African economic growth and investment According to Jim O Neill of Goldman Sachs who originally coined the term Africa s combined current gross domestic product is reasonably similar to that of Brazil and Russia and slightly above that of India 34 South Africa is a gateway to Southern Africa and Africa in general as the most developed African country 34 China is South Africa s largest trading partner and India wants to increase commercial ties with Africa 8 South Africa is also Africa s largest economy but as number 31 in global GDP economies it is far behind its new partners 8 Jim O Neill expressed surprise when South Africa joined BRIC since South Africa s economy is a quarter of the size of Russia s the least economically powerful BRIC nation 35 He believed that the potential was there but did not anticipate inclusion of South Africa at this stage 34 Martyn Davies a South African emerging markets expert argued that the decision to invite South Africa made little commercial sense but was politically astute given China s attempts to establish a foothold in Africa Further South Africa s inclusion in BRICS may translate to greater South African support for China in global fora 35 He has great belief that the S in BRICS could be replaced eventually by SADC African credentials are important geopolitically giving BRICS a four continent breadth influence and trade opportunities 8 South Africa s addition is a deft political move that further enhances BRICS power and status 8 In the original essay that coined the term Goldman Sachs did not argue that the BRICs would organize themselves into an economic bloc or a formal trading association which this move signifies citation needed Marketing edit nbsp The Sao Paulo Stock Exchange is the third largest exchange operator by market value in the world 36 The BRIC term is also used by companies who refer to the four named countries as key to their emerging markets strategies By comparison the reduced acronym IC would not be attractive although the term Chindia is often used BRIC s study specifically focuses on large countries not necessarily the wealthiest or the most productive and was never intended to be an investment thesis If investors read Goldman s research carefully and agreed with the conclusions then they would gain exposure to Asian debt and equity markets rather than to Latin America According to estimates provided by the USDA the wealthiest regions outside of the G6 in 2015 will be Hong Kong South Korea and Singapore Combined with China and India these five economies are likely to be the world s five most influential economies outside of the G6 On the other hand when the R in BRIC is extended beyond Russia and is used as a loose term to include all of Eastern Europe as well then the BRIC story becomes more compelling At issue are the multiple serious problems which confront Russia potentially unstable government environmental degradation critical lack of modern infrastructure etc citation needed and the comparatively much lower growth rate seen in Brazil However Brazil s lower growth rate obscures the fact that the country is wealthier than China or India on a per capita basis has a more developed and global integrated financial system and has an economy potentially more diverse than the other BRICs due to its raw material and manufacturing potential Many other Eastern European countries such as Poland Romania the Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary Bulgaria and several others were able to continually sustain high economic growth rates and do not experience some of the problems that Russia experiences or experience them to a lesser extent In terms of GDP per capita in 2008 Brazil ranked 64th Russia 42nd India 113th and China 89th By comparison South Korea ranked 24th and Singapore 3rd Brazil s stock market the Bovespa has gone from approximately 9 000 in September 2002 to over 70 000 in May 2008 Government policies have favored investment lowering interest rates retiring foreign debt and expanding growth and a reformulation of the tax system is being voted in the congress The British author and researcher Mark Kobayashi Hillary wrote a book in 2007 titled Building a Future with BRICs for European publisher Springer Verlag that examines the growth of the BRICs region and its effect on global sourcing Contributors to the book include Nandan Nilekani and Shiv Nadar International law edit Brazilian lawyer and author Adler Martins has published a paper called Contratos Internacionais entre os paises do BRIC 37 International Agreements Among BRIC countries which highlights the international conventions ratified by the BRIC countries which allow them to maintain trade and investment activities safely within the group Martin s study is being further developed by the Federal University of the Minas Gerais State in Brazil Financial diversification edit It has been argued that geographic diversification would eventually generate superior risk adjusted returns for long term global investors by reducing overall portfolio risk while capturing some of the higher rates of return offered by the emerging markets of Asia Eastern Europe and Latin America 38 By doing so these institutional investors have contributed to the financial and economic development of key emerging nations such as Brazil India China and Russia For global investors India and China constitute both large scale production platforms and reservoirs of new consumers whereas Russia is viewed essentially as an exporter of oil and commodities Brazil and Latin America being somehow in the middle Criticism edit Academics and experts have suggested that China is in a league of its own compared to the other BRIC countries 39 As David Rothkopf wrote in Foreign Policy Without China the BRICs are just the BRI a bland soft cheese that is primarily known for the whine sic that goes with it China is the muscle of the group and the Chinese know it They have effective veto power over any BRIC initiatives because without them who cares really They are the one with the big reserves They are the biggest potential market They are the U S partner in the G2 imagine the coverage a G2 meeting gets vs a G8 meeting and the E2 no climate deal without them and so on 40 Deutsche Bank Research said in a report that economically financially and politically China overshadows and will continue to overshadow the other BRICs It added that China s economy is larger than that of the three other BRIC economies Brazil Russia and India combined Moreover China s exports and its official foreign exchange reserves are more than twice as large as those of the other BRICs combined 41 In that perspective some pension investment experts have argued that China alone accounts for more than 70 of the combined GDP growth generated by the BRIC countries from 1999 to 2010 if there is a BRIC miracle it s first and foremost a Chinese one 42 The growth gap between China and other large emerging economies such as Brazil Russia and India can be attributed to a large extent to China s early focus on ambitious infrastructure projects while China invested roughly 9 of its GDP on infrastructure in the 1990s and 2000s most emerging economies invested only 2 to 5 of their GDP This considerable spending gap allowed the Chinese economy to grow at near optimal conditions while many South American and South Asian economies suffered from various development bottlenecks poor transportation aging power grids mediocre schools 43 Other critics suggest that BRIC is nothing more than a neat acronym for the four largest emerging market economies citation needed but in economic and political terms nothing else apart from the fact that they are all big emerging markets links the four Two are manufacturing based economies and big importers China and India but two are huge exporters of natural resources Brazil and Russia The Economist in its special report on Brazil expressed the following view In some ways Brazil is the steadiest of the BRICs Unlike China and Russia it is a full blooded democracy unlike India it has no serious disputes with its neighbors It is the only BRIC without a nuclear bomb The Heritage Foundation s Indices of Economic Freedom which measures factors such as protection of property rights and free trade ranks Brazil moderately free above the other BRICs which are ranked as mostly unfree 44 Henry Kissinger has stated that the BRIC nations have no hope of acting together as a coherent bloc in world affairs and that any cooperation will be the result of forces acting on the individual nations citation needed In a not so subtle dig critical of the term as nothing more than a shorthand for emerging markets generally critics have suggested a correlating term CEMENT Countries in Emerging Markets Excluded by New Terminology Whilst they accept there has been spectacular growth of the BRIC economies these gains have largely been the result of the strength of emerging markets generally and that strength comes through having BRICs and CEMENT 45 Based on IMF s World Economic Outlook Database October 2016 the top economies in 2021 by projected nominal gross domestic product GDP are going to be China the U S India Japan Germany Russia Indonesia Brazil the U K and France respectively 46 Nowadays Indonesia is not BRIC country but as solely emerging economies in the list sets on seven in projected 2021 top economies There are no South Africa and no South Korea Mexico GCC Arab countries Saudi Arabia Qatar Kuwait Bahrain Oman and the United Arab Emirates Eastern Europe and Turkey as mentioned above Proposed inclusions editMexico and South Korea are currently the world s 13th and 15th largest by nominal GDP just behind the BRIC and G7 economies Both are experiencing rapid GDP growth of 5 every year a figure comparable to Brazil from the original BRICs Jim O Neill expert from the same bank and creator of the economic thesis stated that in 2001 when the paper was created it did not consider Mexico but today it has been included because the country is experiencing the same factors that the other countries first included present 47 48 While South Korea was not originally included in the BRICs recent solid economic growth led to Goldman Sachs proposing to add Mexico and South Korea to the BRICs changing the acronym to BRIMCK with Jim O Neill pointing out that Korea is better placed than most others to realize its potential due to its growth supportive fundamentals 49 Again Jim O Neil recently created the term MIKT that stands for Mexico Indonesia South Korea and Turkey 50 A Goldman Sachs paper published later in December 2005 explained why Mexico and South Korea were not included in the original BRICs According to the paper 25 among the other countries they looked at only Mexico and South Korea have the potential to rival the BRICs but they are economies that they decided to exclude initially because they looked to them as already more developed However due to the popularity of the Goldman Sachs thesis BRIMC and BRICK are becoming more generic marketing terms to refer to these six countries Because of the popularity of the Goldman Sachs thesis BRIC this term has sometimes been extended whereby BRICK 51 52 K for South Korea and BRIMC 47 48 M for Mexico refer to these proposed expansions Other proposed groupings include BRICA GCC Arab countries Saudi Arabia Qatar Kuwait Bahrain Oman and the United Arab Emirates 53 and BRICET including Eastern Europe and Turkey 54 and have become more generic marketing terms to refer to these emerging markets In their paper BRICs and Beyond Goldman Sachs stated that Mexico the four BRIC countries and South Korea should not be really thought of as emerging markets in the classical sense adding that they are a critical part of the modern globalised economy and just as central to its functioning as the current G7 55 The term is primarily used in the economic and financial spheres as well as in academia Its usage has grown specially in the investment sector where it is used to refer to the bonds emitted by these emerging markets governments 56 57 58 Mexico edit nbsp Mexico CityPrimarily along with the BRICs 59 Goldman Sachs argues that the economic potential of Brazil Russia India Mexico and China is such that they may become with the United States the six most dominant economies by 2050 Due to Mexico s rapidly advancing infrastructure increasing middle class and rapidly declining poverty rates it is expected to have a higher GDP per capita than all but three European countries by 2050 this newfound local wealth also contributes to the nation s economy by creating a large domestic consumer market which in turn creates more jobs Mexico in 2050 60 GDP in USD 9 340 trillionGDP per capita 63 149GDP growth 2015 2050 4 0 Total population 142 millionSouth Korea edit South Korea is one of the world s most highly developed countries and including it with developing countries like the BRICs is not deemed correct However commentators such as William Pesek from Bloomberg argue that Korea is Another BRIC in Global Wall suggesting that it stands out from the Next Eleven economies with its BRIC like growth rate despite its Human Development Index being higher than some of the world s most advanced economies including France UK Austria Denmark Finland and Belgium South Korean workers are the wealthiest among major Asian countries with a higher income than Japan and the strongest growth rate in the OECD More importantly it has a significantly higher Growth Environment Score Goldman Sachs way of measuring the long term sustainability of growth than all of the BRICs or N 11s 55 According to the IMF South Korea s GDP measured by purchasing power parity is already larger than Canada and Spain In terms of GDP per capita PPP South Korea overtook Spain in 2010 According to Citibank South Korea will continue by overtaking Germany Britain Australia and Sweden by 2020 surpassing Canada Switzerland Netherlands and Norway by 2030 and taking over the United States by 2040 to become the world s wealthiest major economy While measuring the South Korean economy by nominal GDP is inaccurate as the South Korean won is artificially kept low to boost exports IMF predicts South Korea s nominal GDP and GDP per capita will surpass Spain in 2015 Economists from other investment firms argue that even when measured by nominal GDP per capita South Korea will achieve over 145 000 in 2040 surpassing the United States suggesting that wealth is more important than size for bond investors stating that Korea s credit rating will be rated AAA sooner than 2050 61 United Korea edit Main article United Korea In September 2009 Goldman Sachs published its 188th Global Economics Paper named A United Korea which highlighted in detail the potential economic power of a United Korea which will surpass all current G7 countries except the United States and Japan within 30 40 years of reunification estimating GDP to surpass 6 trillion by 2050 62 The young skilled labor and large amount of natural resources from the North combined with advanced technology infrastructure and large amount of capital in the South as well as Korea s strategic location connecting three economic powers is likely going to create an economy larger than the bulk of the G7 According to some opinions a reunited Korea could occur before 2050 63 If it occurred Korean reunification would immediately raise the country s population to over 70 million 64 Korea in 2050 65 nbsp United Korea nbsp South Korea nbsp North KoreaGDP in USD 6 056 trillion 4 073 trillion 1 982 trillionGDP per capita 86 000 96 000 70 000GDP growth 2015 2050 4 8 3 9 11 4 Total population 71 million 42 million 28 millionSee also editList of country groupings List of multilateral free trade agreements Potential superpower Emerging markets North American Union List of countries by GDP nominal List of countries by average wage List of countries by future GDP PPP estimates MINTReferences edit New era as South Africa joins BRICS SouthAfrica info Archived from the original on 18 April 2011 Retrieved 19 June 2012 a b Rana Foroohar 10 November 2015 Why the Mighty BRIC Nations Have Finally Broken Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2016 O Neill Jim 30 November 2001 Building Better Global Economic BRICs Global Economics Paper No 66 PDF Goldman Sachs Archived PDF from the original on 14 November 2013 Retrieved 9 February 2015 O Neill Jim Dominic Wilson Roopa Purushothaman Anna Stupnytska 1 December 2005 How Solid are the BRICs Global Economics Paper No 134 PDF Goldman Sachs Economic Research Archived PDF from the original on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 28 July 2014 Global Economics Paper No 99 Dreaming with BRICs Archived 2008 10 26 at the Wayback Machine Another BRIC in the wall The Economist 21 April 2008 Archived from the original on 9 February 2015 Retrieved 28 July 2014 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No 188 A United Korea PDF Archived PDF from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2010 Bibliography editElder Miriam and Leahy Joe et al Who s who Bric leaders take their place at the top table Financial Times London September 25 2008 Firzli M Nicolas Forecasting the Future The BRICs and the China Model JTW USAK Research Center Mar 9 2011 Kateb Alexandre Les nouvelles puissances mondiales Pourquoi les BRIC changent le monde The new global powers Why the BRIC change the world in French Paris Ellipses 2011 272 p ISBN 978 2 7298 6473 6 O Neill Jim BRICs could point the way out of the Economic Mire Financial Times London September 23 2008 p 28 Mark Kobayashi Hillary Building a Future with BRICs The Next Decade for Offshoring Nov 2007 ISBN 978 3 540 46453 2 James D Sidaway 2012 Geographies of Development New Maps New Visions The Professional Geographer 64 1 49 62 J Vercueil Les pays emergents Bresil Russie Inde Chine Mutations economiques et nouveaux defis Emerging Countries Brazil Russia India China Economic Transformations and new Challenges in French Paris Breal 2010 207 p ISBN 978 2 7495 0957 0 Paulo Borba Casella BRIC Bresil Russie Inde Chine et Afrique du Sud A l heure d un nouvel ordre juridique international ed A Pedone Paris Sept 2011 EAN ISBN 978 2 233 00626 4External links editThe Sino Brazilian Principles in a Latin American and BRICS Context The Case for Comparative Public Budgeting Legal Research Wisconsin International Law Journal 13 May 2015 Centre for Rising Powers University of Cambridge Russian President Putin planning to glue together the most powerful superpower coalition in the world Archived 2013 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Putin The Father of BRIC The Creation of Clubs The BRIC Gorbachev Not O Neill Deserves BRIC Credit Insights on the Iran deal BRICS and handling a crisis in Venezuela Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BRIC amp oldid 1205985188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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