New Delhi:
The BRICS group of emerging market nations will look at ways of pressuring the West to redress global economic imbalances amid growing frustration at the pace of change in institutions such as the IMF at a meeting in Delhi today.
Brazil's Trade and Industry Minister Fernando Pimentel told Reuters that his country hopes for a summit communique denouncing what it sees as unfair monetary policies by Europe and the United States.
Other trade ministers from the BRICS group - Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - struck a defiant tone, saying they are not bound by unilateral sanctions against Iran.
The five nations, who collectively account for nearly half the world's population and a fifth of economic output, are expected to announce steps to bring their economies closer together, including linking their stock exchanges and plans for a joint development fund in the mould of the World Bank.
"We would look to see promises of reforms at multilateral institutions like the World Bank and IMF getting translated into action," a senior Indian official with knowledge of the matter said, adding that India would consult with other BRICS countries during the summit.
The group is often criticised for being too diverse to be effective, but Jim O'Neill, the Goldman Sachs economist who coined the acronym in 2001, said the very fact they meet is a message to the world.
"It is a very powerful reminder to the G7 and the Western powers that they need to get their act together in giving up more space and room in the G20, IMF and World Bank. It serves a really good purpose in that sense," said O'Neill.
India and Brazil have for years been angling for permanent seats on the UN Security Council, while promised changes to give the emerging powers greater voting rights at the International Monetary Fund ha v e yet to be ratified by the United States.
The BRICS group has so far not come out in support of any of the three candidates hoping to replace US official Robert Zoellick at the head of the World Bank - possibly reflecting fatigue with what they see as resistance to change in multilateral bodies.
Copyright @ Thomson Reuters 2012