BEIJING- Still reeling from the just-passed financial maelstrom, the global economy is now, at best, in poorly charted waters, and needs both good engines and good steering to navigate ahead.
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It is in such a challenging context that leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, a quintuplet of major global economic engines known as BRICS, gather Thursday in the southern Chinese city of Sanya not only to chart the course forward for the young and promising operation mechanism but to explore ways of reinforcing the still fragile world economic recovery.
High on the agenda of the gathering, themed "Looking into the Future, Sharing prosperity" and to be chaired by Chinese President Hu Jintao, are the international situation, global economic and financial affairs, development issues and cooperation within BRICS, Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Wu Hailong said at a press briefing earlier this month.
The conference, the first for South Africa as a full member and the third for the others, "will convey to the international community a message of confidence, solidarity, cooperation and common benefit," Wu said. "We hope that through the concerted efforts of all parties, this meeting will be an important milestone in the cooperation process among the BRICS countries."
A more efficient and productive cooperation regime accords with the interests of both the BRICS and the whole world, as it will not only bring substantial benefits to the peoples of the five member countries but help boost global economic growth and contribute to world peace and development, said the assistant minister.
This cooperative spirit strikes exactly the right note in the struggling post-crisis era. In a recent speech entitled "Global Challenges, Global Solutions," Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said among the core needs of the global economic recovery are new approaches to economic policy, to social inclusion and to cooperation and multilateralism.
In the same vein of thinking, Park Cyn-Yong, a senior economist at Asian Development Bank, said in a recent interview with Xinhua that the latest international financial wipeout and economic meltdown "really showed us that the world needs multiple engines of growth for very strong and balanced growth" and that emerging-market economies should diminish their economic reliance on advanced economies.
During the Great Depression-scale crisis, which first erupted in 2008 in the United States, developed countries failed to function as the desperately needed engines to pull the world economy through, and it was, to a great extent, the emerging economies that rushed to the rescue, noted Liu Youfa, vice president of the China Institute of International Studies (CIIS).
The fact that past rescuees have now become rescuers embodies an overarching trend coursing through the international arena, namely the collective rise of developing countries, which equips the world with alternative economic powerhouses and helps steer the international order toward a more balanced future. The BRICS framework is just the bellwether in this megatrend of the times.