March 2, 2026

General Studies Paper-2

Context

Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the BRICS Summit Plenary session on ‘Strengthening Multilateralism, Economic-Financial Affairs, and Artificial Intelligence.

Major Highlights of the BRICS Summit

  • The BRICS Leaders’ Declaration, adopted at the summit reflected India’s key concerns, especially on cross-border terrorism and global governance reforms.
  • PM Modi said that the majority of the world’s population is not properly represented in key global institutions.
  • He called for a greater role for the developing world in international decision-making.
  • He also emphasizes the need for making BRICS more effective in an increasingly multipolar world.
  • He put forward four key suggestions to enhance cooperation among BRICS nations:
    • Improving Systems to Boost Credibility: Highlighted the importance of demand-driven decision-making, long-term financial sustainability, and maintaining a healthy credit rating.
    • Collaborative Initiatives: Proposed creating a BRICS Science and Research Repository that can also benefit the countries of the Global South.
    • Resilient supply chain: He emphasised the need to secure and make the supply chain resilient, particularly for critical minerals and technology.
    • Responsible AI: Stressed the importance of Responsible AI, stating that India believes in artificial intelligence as a tool for enhancing human values and capabilities and is guided by the mantra of ‘AI for All’.

Increasing Relevance of BRICS

  • Platform for Strategic Autonomy: BRICS offers India a non-Western multilateral platform to engage with global powers without aligning exclusively with any bloc.
  • Strengthening the Group: With the additions of new countries, it will represent almost half the world’s population, and will include three of the world’s biggest oil producers, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Iran.
  • Focus on Middle East: With the inclusion of Saudi Arabia, Iran, the UAE, and Egypt, there is a Middle East focus, bearing geo-economic, geostrategic, and geopolitical implications.
  • Voice for Global Governance: The grouping now represents a larger share of the world’s population and economy.
    • This means the group is potentially a powerful voice for reforming global governance structures and can also act as an influential player within these arrangements.
    • Additionally, India positions itself as a leading voice of the Global South within BRICS.
  • Push for Multilateral Reform: A larger BRICS enhances the push for UNSC reform, where India seeks a permanent seat.
  • Counterbalance to China’s Dominance: A broader membership may dilute China’s dominance within BRICS.
    • India can build coalitions with new members to promote balanced agendas and prevent unilateralism.

Challenges

  • Internal Geopolitical Tensions: India–China border disputes strain bilateral trust.
  • Asymmetry in Power and Influence: China’s economic dominance creates imbalance in decision-making.
  • Lack of Cohesive Vision: BRICS lacks a unified ideology or strategic coherence beyond broad themes like multilateralism and development.
    • Members pursue divergent national interests, limiting collective action.
  • Institutional Limitations: BRICS has no permanent secretariat, making coordination ad hoc and dependent on rotating presidencies.
    • Limited enforcement mechanisms reduce implementation of summit declarations and commitments.
  • Economic Disparities: Members are at different stages of economic development and face unique challenges, it creates difficulty in setting common economic goals or trade policies.
  • Impact of External Alliances: India’s engagement with the West and Indo-Pacific frameworks.
    • Russia’s increasing dependence on China post-Ukraine conflict.
    • These shifts complicate internal unity and raise questions about long-term alignment.
  • Expansion-related Challenges: The inclusion of new members adds diversity but also increases coordination complexity and risks diluting the original focus.

Way Ahead

  • While BRICS holds significant potential as a voice of the Global South and a platform for multipolarity, it faces serious structural, political, and institutional challenges.
  • Overcoming these would require a shared strategic vision, institutional strengthening, and internal diplomacy — especially among key players like India, China, and Russia.
  • As the BRICS operates based on consensus-driven decision-making, attaining consensus among 11 countries characterized by diverse economies, geographical locations, and interests proves to be substantially more challenging than doing so among the original five members.
  • To ensure the continued effectiveness and consistency of the institution, in the long run, BRICS might opt to focus on easier-to-achieve objectives.

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