BRICS nations ink deal to create $100bn dev bank

Posted by BankInfo on Thu, Jul 17 2014 09:55 am

The leaders of the five BRICS countries have signed a deal to create a new $100bn (£58.3bn) development bank and emergency reserve fund, reports BBC Online.

The BRICS group comprises Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

The capital for the bank will be split equally among the five participating countries.

The bank will have a headquarters in Shanghai, China and the first president for the bank will come from India.

Brazil's President, Dilma Rousseff, announced the creation of the bank at a BRICS summit meeting in Fortaleza, Brazil on Tuesday.

The halls of Fortaleza's conference centre were full of whispers about whether or not these BRICS nations - which often see each other more as rivals than friends - could agree a deal on the development bank.

But challenges were overcome and the announcements were made. Despite their political and economic differences, the one thing these countries do agree upon is that rich countries have too much power in institutions like the World Bank and the IMF.

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's comments made that feeling crystal clear - the BRICS countries, she said, have the power to introduce positive changes - ones that they think are more equal and fair.

At first, the bank will start off with $50bn in initial capital.

The emergency reserve fund - which was announced as a "Contingency Reserve Arrangement" - will also have $100bn, and will help developing nations avoid "short-term liquidity pressures, promote further BRICS cooperation, strengthen the global financial safety net and complement existing international arrangements". 

News:Daily Sun/17-July-2014
Posted in Banking, News

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