BRICS demand global monetary shake-up, greater influence

SANYA, China,  (Reuters) – The BRICS group of  emerging-market powers kept up the pressure yesterday for a  revamped global monetary system that relies less on the dollar  and for a louder voice in international financial institutions.

The leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa  also called for stronger regulation of commodity derivatives to  dampen excessive volatility in food and energy prices, which  they said posed new risks for the recovery of the world economy.

Meeting on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, they said  the recent financial crisis had exposed the inadequacies of the  current monetary order, which has the dollar as its linchpin.

What was needed, they said in a statement, was “a  broad-based international reserve currency system providing  stability and certainty” — thinly veiled criticism of what the  BRICS see as Washington’s neglect of its global monetary  responsibilities.

The BRICS are worried that America’s large trade and budget  deficits will eventually debase the dollar. They also begrudge  the financial and political privileges that come with being the  leading reserve currency.

“The world economy is undergoing profound and complex  changes,” Chinese President Hu Jintao said. “The era demands  that the BRICS countries strengthen dialogue and cooperation.”

In another dig at the dollar, the development banks of the  five BRICS nations agreed to establish mutual credit lines  denominated in their local currencies, not the U.S. currency.  The head of China Development Bank (CDB), Chen Yuan, said he  was prepared to lend up to 10 billion yuan to fellow BRICS, and  his Russian counterpart said he was looking to borrow the yuan  equivalent of at least $500 million via CDB.
“We think this will undoubtedly broaden the opportunities  for Russian companies to diversify their loans,” Vladimir  Dmitriev, the chairman of VEB, Russia’s state development bank,  told reporters.
ALL DOWN TO THE BRICS

The call by the BRICS for a new monetary order are not new.

But, coming hours before a meeting in Washington of finance  ministers from the Group of Seven industrial nations, the  traditional power brokers of the world economy, yesterday’s  communique showed the growing confidence of emerging markets. Burdened by heavy debt, the United States, the euro zone and  Japan are struggling to shake off the lingering effects of the  2008 global financial crisis. Rich countries will grow 2.4  percent this year and 2.6 percent in 2012, the International  Monetary fund forecast this week.

By contrast, less well-off countries have emerged relatively  unscathed. The IMF is forecasting that emerging and developing  countries will grow 6.5 percent both this year and next.

“The quality and the durability of the global economic  recovery process depends to a great measure on how the BRICS  economies perform,” Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said.

The leaders reviewed the global role of the Special Drawing  Right, the IMF’s accounting unit and reserve asset, which some  experts believe could grow into a partial substitute for the  dollar.

But they stepped around the issue of whether the yuan should  join the SDR, saying only that they welcomed discussion of the  composition of the SDR’s basket of currencies.

A member-country official said the group was split on  whether China’s currency, which cannot be freely exchanged  except for trade and investment purposes, met the criteria for  being part of the SDR.