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This Article is From Aug 21, 2023

BRICS Expansion Gets Interesting If Saudis Join, Jim O’Neill Says

Adding countries to the BRICS bloc will matter economically if Saudi Arabia is one of them but otherwise it’s hard to see the point, said Jim O’Neill, a prominent economist and veteran of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

BRICS Expansion Gets Interesting If Saudis Join, Jim O’Neill Says
South African police officers walk in front of an event banner outside the venue for the BRICS summit at the Sandton Convention Center in the Sandton district of Johannesburg, South Africa, on Monday, Aug. 21, 2023. The summit of BRICS leaders is scheduled to take place from Aug. 22-24 in Johannesburg, where they’ll discuss whether to admit more nations to its ranks.

Adding countries to the BRICS bloc will matter economically if Saudi Arabia is one of them but otherwise it's hard to see the point, said Jim O'Neill, a prominent economist and veteran of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

“I think them joining — which I imagine if anybody is joining it will include them — is a pretty big deal,” he said in an interview on Bloomberg Television Monday.

Expansion of BRICS membership is top of the agenda for the summit being hosted this week by South Africa in the commercial capital of Johannesburg. 

The Emerging Market Bloc That Wants to Shake Up the World Order

There have been more than 20 formal applications to join and President Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday night gave his formal backing to the goal of expanding the club. Russia Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in June declared that Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria and Egypt - were all strong applicants.

O'Neill said Saudi Arabia's traditionally close links with the US and role as world's biggest swing oil producer means its addition to the club would add real weight.

“The first thing is whether they then start actually pricing the oil in all these local currencies and not in the dollar,” O'Neill, now a cross-bench peer in the House of Lords, said. 

A key BRICS goal is to lessen dependence on the dollar by boosting payments in members' currencies, alongside a long-term ambition to launch a common currency to challenge the greenback. O'Neill said the idea of a BRICS common currency displacing the dollar any time soon was “madness.”

O'Neill, who coined the acronym BRIC in 2001 to describe the rising might of Brazil, Russia, India and China — South Africa joined in 2010, a year after the founding four got together — said making it bigger could make it harder for the club to get things done.

“They've had enough difficulty trying to agree just between the five of them,” he said. “So beyond the admittedly hugely powerful symbolism, I'm not quite sure what having a lot more countries in there is going to achieve.”

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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