2Nd Bric Summit

The 2010 BRIC summit took place in Brasília, Brazil on April 16, 2010.

This was the second BRIC summit after Yekaterinburg in 2009. The meeting took place between the four heads of government from the BRIC states following bilateral meetings in the prior days.

2nd BRIC Summit
Segunda cúpula do BRIC
2Nd Bric Summit
Host countryBrazil
Dates16 April 2010
CitiesBrasília
ParticipantsBRICS
Follows1st BRIC summit
Precedes3rd BRICS summit

Overview

The acronym BRIC (for Brazil, Russia, India, China) was first used in a Goldman Sachs thesis projecting the economic potential of Brazil, Russia, India and China.

Previously, the 1st BRIC summit took place in Yekaterinburg, Russia in 2009 and discussed global issues. This year's summit follows the Washington Nuclear summit hosted by U.S. President Barack Obama which was attended by all four BRIC states.

Between 2003 and 2007, BRIC countries carried 65% of the expansion of global GDP. In 2009, the combined PPP GDP of the BRIC countries was US$16.3 trillion, or 23.4% of global total. From 2003 to 2008, Brazil trade with the other BRIC countries increased by 382%, or US$10.7 billion to US$51.7 billion.

Participants

The heads of state and heads of government of the four countries participated.

Core BRIC members
Host state and leader are shown in bold text.
Member Represented by Title
2Nd Bric Summit  Brazil Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva President
2Nd Bric Summit  Russia Dmitry Medvedev President
2Nd Bric Summit  India Manmohan Singh Prime Minister
2Nd Bric Summit  China Hu Jintao President
    Invited leaders

Members of BRIC

Guests

Other meetings

A few months before the summit, the Indian Foreign Minister, SM Krishna, met President Lula in Brasília, where he stressed for the need to accelerate relations between the three countries. He also emphasised India's commitment to IBSA as a symbol of "the spirit of South-South cooperation."

Days prior to the official summit, bilateral meetings also took place between Brazil and India, as well as between Brazil and China. India and China also agreed to work together instead of competitively signaling there is enough room for them both to grow together. The two also agreed to give greater market access to each other's products to boost trade.[citation needed]

Additionally, between April 13 to 16 other meetings and forums took place such as: the IBSA/BRIC Business Forum; meeting of development banks and commercial banks Meeting; a think-tank seminar; a cooperatives forum; and a meeting of representatives on strategy and security.

Issues

2Nd Bric Summit 
Picture of the BRIC national leaders at the event.

The leaders discussed various current issues including the Iran and nuclear weapons, development, the furtherance of the BRIC (and IBSA that was occurring at the same time) as an international body, the global economic situation at the time, reform of financial institutions, the financial G20, and cooperation and issues related to global governance.

However, China explicitly stated the Chinese Yuan was not discussed. Despite coming under heavy pressure to let their currency appreciate the Chinese appeared to be standing their ground. Despite the refusal to discuss this the currency fell.

Iran

The day before the summit Brazil expressed "affinity" with China towards the Iranian nuclear issue. Foreign Minister of Brazil, Celso Amorim, said "Our impression... is that the effectiveness of sanctions is debatable." He added that President Lula had brought up the same with the Indian Prime Minister Singh.[citation needed] In the same vein, the IBSA talk preceding the summit called for further talk on the Iranian issue.[citation needed]

Development

Chinese Premier Hu Jintao showed China's willingness to be a positive partner in global development when he showed China's meteoric rise in saying: "The scale and complexity of the challenges that we face in the course of development are unmatched anywhere else in the world and have been rarely seen in human history. We must make persistent efforts for a long time to come. The Chinese people suffered so much in modern history, and we therefore value peace, stability, harmony and freedom more than anything else. A prosperous and growing China dedicated to peace and cooperation is willing and able to make new and even greater contribution to mankind's pursuit of peace and development."

Furtherance of BRIC

India took the initiative to call for improving the importance of the BRIC and IBSA groups. Indian PM Singh also called for closer cooperation in the fields of energy and food security, as well as tapping into the potential of other sectors such as trade and investment, science and technology and infrastructure. He added that pooling together the experiences of each can lead to more inclusive growth. "We are four large countries with abundant resources, large populations and diverse societies... We aspire for rapid growth for ourselves and for an external environment that is conducive to our development goals. [Our people] expect us to work together so as to bring the benefits of inclusive social and economic development to them. Our grouping includes two of the largest energy producers and two of the largest consumers in the world. We can cooperate in both upstream and downstream areas, and in the development of new fuels and clean energy technologies."

Criticisms

The Chinese president, Hu Jintao, brought forward his departure to April 15 (before the actual talks) instead of April 17 due to the earthquake in Qinghai. Despite this he did continue with the working meeting and signed a bilateral agreement between the four countries.

Reactions

At least one Indian media outlet call the meet "answer to the G7 platform of top industrialised countries." It added that the meet "underscore[d] a shared quest for greater collective influence within the changing geometry of the international system."

Investors cited India and China as the best bets of BRIC, of which India was seen as providing investors with the best bet over the long haul, however it also faces challenges to finance the "modernization of its woeful infrastructure given its high debt levels and ambivalence towards foreign investment and privatization." But it was added that "these faster growing markets will translate into above average returns."

See also

References

Tags:

2Nd Bric Summit Overview2Nd Bric Summit Participants2Nd Bric Summit Gallery of participating leaders2Nd Bric Summit Other meetings2Nd Bric Summit Issues2Nd Bric Summit Criticisms2Nd Bric Summit Reactions2Nd Bric Summit2009 BRIC summitBRICBrasíliaBrazilHead of governmentYekaterinburg

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Penn BadgleyThe BeatlesDeepika PadukoneSouth AfricaN. T. Rama Rao Jr.NexonSam HydeEuropeBobby HurleyIslamMalaysiaList of highest-grossing Indian filmsPatrick SwayzeSarah, Duchess of YorkUEFA Euro 2024NigeriaXXX (2002 film)Oppenheimer (film)Portugal national football teamJamie Lee CurtisFIFA World CupJohn LennonWrestleMania 38MadonnaSteven TylerYokozuna (wrestler)Great ExpectationsBanzhaf power indexBigg Boss (Malayalam season 5)LeBron JamesSteven SpielbergParineeti ChopraMexicoJudd ApatowDick Van Dyke2023 Scottish National Party leadership electionBlackpinkXXX (film series)IsraelJohn F. KennedyJonathan MajorsCatByteDanceKeira KnightleyThe Continental (miniseries)Urfi JavedBallerina (upcoming film)MillennialsJohn TravoltaList of Marvel Cinematic Universe filmsKings LeagueIOSUEFA European Championship qualifyingTwitterYouTubeRoman EmpireHumza YousafBukayo SakaTottenham Hotspur F.C.The Whale (2022 film)2026 FIFA World CupStormy DanielsRashmika MandannaChuck NorrisTaylor SwiftIndira GandhiKaty PerryI Don't Like MondaysResident EvilInterstellar (film)Freddie MercuryOlivia WildeRory CulkinHarry KaneOwen WilsonJudy Garland2023 Israeli judicial reform protestsWill SmithChristina Ricci🡆 More