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How BRICS is challenging SWIFT

 Why in News ?

  • At the Kazan Summit 2024, BRICS leaders unveiled a prototype of BRICS Pay, a cross-border payment system aimed at reducing dependence on the US dollar and SWIFT network.
  • This represents a concrete step in the long-term BRICS strategy (since 2014) to build alternative global financial architecture led by developing nations.

Relevance :

GS Paper II (International Relations):

  • Rise of multipolar financial order and reform of global governance institutions.
  • South-South cooperation and de-dollarisation debates.
  • Indias role in shaping alternative global financial frameworks (BRICS, NDB, CRA).

GS Paper III (Economy):

  • Impact on global trade, finance, and monetary policy.
  • Digital payment systems and financial sovereignty.
  • Currency internationalisation and fintech diplomacy.

Background – BRICS’ Financial Autonomy Journey

  • 2014 Fortaleza Summit:
    • Turning point where BRICS established its own financial institutions:
      • New Development Bank (NDB): Development financing for emerging economies.
      • Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA): Financial safety net for liquidity crises.
    • First time developing countries created such institutions independent of the IMF–World Bank system.
  • Post-2014 (Crimea Crisis):
    • Western sanctions on Russia catalysed BRICS’ efforts to expand local currency usage in trade and finance.
  • 2017 Xiamen Summit:
    • Agreement to enhance currency cooperation — currency swaps, local currency settlements, and direct investments.
  • Early 2020s:
    • Formation of BRICS Payments Task Force (BPTF) to explore interoperable payment systems and digital infrastructure.

The 2024 Kazan Summit – Key Milestones

  • Launch of BRICS Pay Prototype: Demonstrated in Moscow (Oct 2024).
  • Strategic Focus:
    • Develop a BRICS-led cross-border payments network independent of the SWIFT system (controlled by G-10 central banks).
    • Strengthen correspondent banking networks within BRICS.
    • Enable settlements in local currencies.
  • Symbolic Act:
    • BRICS Banknote unveiled, igniting debate on a potential BRICS common currency.
  • Geopolitical Trigger:
    • Inclusion of Iran (2024) – long targeted by US sanctions – added urgency.
    • Threat from Donald Trump (President-elect) to impose 100% tariffs if BRICS moved to replace the dollar.

Why BRICS Wants to De-dollarise ?

  • Reduce vulnerability to US-dominated sanctions and monetary policy.
  • Increase autonomy of developing economies in global finance.
  • Challenge unequal financial architecture dominated by Bretton Woods institutions.
  • Enhance South-South financial cooperation.
  • Support intra-BRICS trade through local currencies, lowering transaction costs and volatility risks.

Existing National Payment Systems (Building Blocks for BRICS Pay)

Country System Features / Strengths
Russia SPFS (System for Transfer of Financial Messages) Domestic alternative to SWIFT, post-2014 sanctions.
China CIPS (Cross-Border Interbank Payment System) Supports RMB settlements; participants from 120+ countries.
India UPI (Unified Payments Interface) Fast, interoperable digital payment infrastructure; accepted in 9 countries.
Brazil Pix Operated by central bank; regional expansion in Latin America.

 

  • Challenge: Interoperability and harmonisation among these diverse systems.
  • Opportunity: Integrate these networks to create a BRICS Financial Grid.

Challenges & Divergences

  • Differing ambitions:
    • China seeks RMB internationalisation via CIPS.
    • India aims to globalise UPI.
    • Brazil promotes Pix regionally.
  • Lack of common regulatory & cybersecurity standards.
  • Political coordination needed among diverse governance models.
  • Resistance from global markets tied to dollar liquidity and SWIFT security protocols.

Strategic Implications

  • For Global Finance:
    • Marks the rise of a multipolar monetary order.
    • Could weaken dollar’s hegemony over time.
    • Encourages digital currency integration among emerging economies.
  • For Developing Countries:
    • Offers an alternative payment route immune to Western sanctions.
    • May facilitate South-South trade settlements in local currencies.
  • For the West:
    • Seen as a challenge to the financial dominance of the US and EU.
    • Could trigger financial fragmentation and geopolitical countermeasures.

Way Forward

  • Technical: Develop secure, scalable interoperability architecture among SPFS, CIPS, UPI, and Pix.
  • Institutional: Empower the BRICS Payment Task Force to draft unified regulatory and cybersecurity protocols.
  • Strategic: Gradually expand to include other Global South economies (ASEAN, Africa, Latin America).
  • Political: Balance China’s dominance to ensure equitable governance.

BRICS — Quick Summary

  • Origin: Coined by Jim ONeill (2001)formal group in 2009 (BRIC); South Africa joined 2010 → BRICS.
  • Members (2025): Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa + Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE (BRICS+).
  • Objective: Reform global governance, promote multipolarity, enhance trade, tech & development cooperation.
  • Institutions:
    • New Development Bank (NDB) – HQ: Shanghai.
    • Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA) – $100 bn liquidity pool.
    • Business Council, Think Tank, Academic Forum.
  • Significance: ~45% of population, ~30% of global GDP (PPP). Driving de-dollarisation & Global South solidarity.
  • Indias Focus: Multilateral reform, digital public goods, resilient supply chains, climate finance.

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