PART I: DISCUSSION PRIOR to NEW DELHI SUMMIT. With the official theme "BRICS Partnership for Global Stability, Security and Prosperity" gather today in New Delhi the leaders of the five countries - Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - that give name to the acronym. Will this fourth group summit usual geopolitical rhetoric whole foods catering surgical whole foods catering procedures that effectively pressure the G7 (club of the seven developed countries) is the big question that runs through the statements of economists and consultants heard by Express, coming from the five countries involved.
The agenda included various topics around whole foods catering the global geopolitical and economic situation. In geopolitical terms, analysts whole foods catering and economists pointed ears the Middle East situation (Iran and Syria) and the issue of permanent seats with veto in the Security Council (where Brazil, India and South Africa are not) United Nations. And among the economic issues, the common strategy towards the eurozone crisis, the possibility of creating a development bank, the launch of an alliance between stock exchanges in five countries, the credit institution named in the currencies of each to business whole foods catering transactions between the five, eliminating the dollar, cooperation whole foods catering in maritime whole foods catering security, and the possible analysis of the succession whole foods catering in the presidency of the World Bank in June.
To spice up the environment, The Times of India were reporting a few hours of the summit that India will overtake China in 2050, after the latter overtake the United States in 2020, according to the "Report on Wealth" Knight Frank and Citi Private Bank.
In the first half met in New Delhi, a pre-summit, where academics and think tanks of experts from five countries discussed and developed ideas to be incorporated in the final declaration of the leaders.
"The realization of this summit is more a clear political position as group shows that world power is changing and quickly, and no doubt that the vast media coverage will make it clear to many people," stresses us Soumodip Sarkar , born in Jamshedpur - known as the "steel city" of India - and professor in the Department of Management at the University of Évora.
Oliver Stuenkel, a professor of International Relations at the School of History and Social Sciences of the Getulio Vargas Foundation in São Paulo, believes that the agenda of this fourth meeting whole foods catering clearly shows that "the BRICS are to institutionalize slowly their ties." Stuenkel participated in New Delhi in the preparatory meetings of the summit and see the topics that will be addressed the demand for creation of more solid collaboration platforms. It is clearly optimistic: "In addition to the idea of a Development Bank, the initiative of a common stock market, the elimination of barriers to investment and cooperation in maritime security, point to a common regulatory plan for the development of trade between BRICS. Also will be given steps towards strengthening ties at the level of civil society, who are weak, and the relations between research institutes and non-governmental organizations to exchange best practices on issues such as inequality, pollution, poverty reduction, health and education. "
However, the differences between the five are always a thorn in the side. "More than speeches decisions," fears Ricardo Amorim, Brazilian consultant in São Paulo, participating in the weekly program "Manhattan Connection" broadcast in Brazil by GloboNews channel Globo. "They have become increasingly powerful and important in the global economy, but there are great differences of interest between them, which make it difficult to act as a coordinated bloc," said Amorim. "The summit will certainly produce a strong rhetoric surrounding the geopolitical cooperation and coordination of policies, but, beyond this, it is unlikely that the initiatives announced, will have a real impact on the ground", doubts the Russian economist Constantin Gurdgiev, professor at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland. The Indian consultant Ashutosh Sheshabalaya, goes even further - the BRICS statement window of opportunity may close. "I do not expect anything extraordinary this summit. The differences between the BRICS are deeper than most people think. If the financial 'Western' crisis disappear, also the BRICS go down the drain, "says without tracery, the author of" Made in India ".
China is undoubtedly the strongest power in this group. It is the second economy in the world and its soft power capacity whole foods catering worldwide, despite the internal whole foods catering repression and controversial positions in the UN Security Council, is indisputable. The economic goals are the most tran
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