Containers are seen at the Yangshan Deep-Water Port in Shanghai, China. Photo Reuters
Containers are seen at the Yangshan Deep-Water Port in Shanghai, China. Photo Reuters

BRICS bloc is a positive opportunity for SA

Busisiwe Mavuso
It is right for our government to cultivate relationships with BRICS. India and China in particular are massive and fast-growing markets from which South African businesses can benefit.

However, our relationship with BRICS must not come at the expense of our relationships with the West. This is surely obvious.

While the opportunities in the East are clear, our trading relationships with the West are essential to our economic well-being.

Unfortunately, this does not seem to be clear to those representing us.

Last week, South Africa hosted the BRICS Youth Summit as a prelude to the main BRICS Summit we will be hosting in Sandton in late August.

We got off on the wrong foot.

I was taken aback at the address by Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, minister in the presidency for women, youth and persons with disabilities. Rather than focusing on the opportunities that South Africa’s relationship with BRICS present, her speech instead focused on BRICS as a means to "accelerate the downfall of an unjust imperialist world order".

The speech was heavy on rhetoric that presented BRICS as a competitive pole in the world against the West, rather than an alliance designed to enhance the development and cooperation of its members.

Ironically, in the same speech, Dlamini-Zuma bemoaned those who prefer us shipping raw materials rather than manufactured goods to the world.

Raw material

She did not pause to consider that our relationships with India and China are overwhelmingly characterised by South Africa exporting raw materials and importing manufactured goods. She ignored that it is Europe and the US that import by far the majority of our manufactured goods, including vehicles and machinery made here, the kinds of goods that drive industrial activity and add more value to our economy.

Of course, this pattern of low value-added exports to Asia is one we should aim to change, shifting the trading mix over time to goods with more value added.

But I fail to see how this will be achieved by alienating Western markets. Indeed, we should use the manufacturing base that is supported by Western trade to improve our scale and competitiveness so that we can gain a competitive foothold in Asian markets for our manufactured goods.

Immense harm would be done to our industrial base if we collapsed the trade relationships that currently sustain it without any competitive access to new trading markets.

China, India and Brazil have huge populations that create potentially massive demand for goods we could potentially provide. But we need to be realistic about our approach to those opportunities, particularly with China, which clearly has a substantial appetite for mineral resources, but a highly competitive manufacturing capability that would be difficult for South Africa to compete with.

Value

China clearly is interested in maintaining access to our raw materials, but our focus should be on creating opportunity for value-added goods and services exports.

Russia, of course, represents quite unique risks given its war with Ukraine and we must be careful not to suggest that our relationship with BRICS implies an endorsement of Russia.

To that end, it is positive that President Vladimir Putin is not going to attend the summit in person as his presence would have completely dominated the agenda and limited the chance of positive outcomes.

As we head toward the summit, I implore those who will be representing our interests to do so strategically and with a clear view of what would benefit us.

Harming relationships with the West by proclaiming that BRICS exists to somehow counter the West would do us no good at all. Instead, we should look to work with BRICS members to improve relations and opportunities for our economies to trade with one another.

In particular, South Africa should focus on enabling greater export of its manufactured goods to the other BRICS countries.

We should present BRICS as an opportunity to drive the economic development of its member nations, an outcome that the West and all friends of South Africa would see positively. BRICS should be about creating South African opportunity, not risks of impoverishment.

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Republikein 2024-05-09

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Premier League: Crystal Palace 4 vs 0 Manchester United SerieA: Udinese 1 vs 1 Napoli | Salernitana 1 vs 2 Atalanta Katima Mulilo: 13° | 33° Rundu: 14° | 33° Eenhana: 15° | 34° Oshakati: 17° | 34° Ruacana: 19° | 35° Tsumeb: 17° | 32° Otjiwarongo: 15° | 31° Omaruru: 19° | 33° Windhoek: 15° | 29° Gobabis: 16° | 30° Henties Bay: 15° | 18° Wind speed: 21km/h, Wind direction: S, Low tide: 10:06, High tide: 04:02, Low Tide: 22:18, High tide: 16:30 Swakopmund: 15° | 17° Wind speed: 25km/h, Wind direction: SW, Low tide: 10:04, High tide: 04:00, Low Tide: 22:16, High tide: 16:28 Walvis Bay: 15° | 21° Wind speed: 28km/h, Wind direction: SW, Low tide: 10:04, High tide: 03:59, Low Tide: 22:16, High tide: 16:27 Rehoboth: 18° | 30° Mariental: 22° | 32° Keetmanshoop: 18° | 32° Aranos: 20° | 32° Lüderitz: 12° | 22° Ariamsvlei: 16° | 31° Oranjemund: 10° | 18° Luanda: 25° | 27° Gaborone: 14° | 29° Lubumbashi: 15° | 28° Mbabane: 14° | 30° Maseru: 11° | 26° Antananarivo: 11° | 22° Lilongwe: 16° | 27° Maputo: 17° | 31° Windhoek: 15° | 29° Cape Town: 13° | 16° Durban: 20° | 33° Johannesburg: 17° | 25° Dar es Salaam: 23° | 30° Lusaka: 15° | 28° Harare: 13° | 27° Currency: GBP to NAD 23.01 | EUR to NAD 19.85 | CNY to NAD 2.56 | USD to NAD 18.51 | DZD to NAD 0.14 | AOA to NAD 0.02 | BWP to NAD 1.31 | EGP to NAD 0.38 | KES to NAD 0.14 | NGN to NAD 0.01 | ZMW to NAD 0.67 | ZWL to NAD 0.04 | BRL to NAD 3.64 | RUB to NAD 0.2 | INR to NAD 0.22 | USD to DZD 134.52 | USD to AOA 834.06 | USD to BWP 13.64 | USD to EGP 47.29 | USD to KES 130.48 | USD to NGN 1404.8 | USD to ZAR 18.51 | USD to ZMW 27.25 | USD to ZWL 321 | Stock Exchange: JSE All Share Index 77177.44 Up +0.32% | Namibian Stock Exchange (NSX) Overall Index 1714.65 Down -0.07% | Casablanca Stock Exchange (CSE) MASI 13418.67 Up +0.32% | Egyptian Exchange (EGX) 30 Index 25988.93 Down -1.67% | Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE) DCI Same 0 | NSX: MTC 7.75 SAME | Anirep 8.99 SAME | Capricorn Investment group 17.34 SAME | FirstRand Namibia Ltd 49 DOWN 0.50% | Letshego Holdings (Namibia) Ltd 4.1 UP 2.50% | Namibia Asset Management Ltd 0.7 SAME | Namibia Breweries Ltd 31.49 UP 0.03% | Nictus Holdings - Nam 2.22 SAME | Oryx Properties Ltd 12.1 UP 1.70% | Paratus Namibia Holdings 11.99 SAME | SBN Holdings 8.45 SAME | Trustco Group Holdings Ltd 0.48 SAME | B2Gold Corporation 47.34 DOWN 1.50% | Local Index closed 677.62 UP 0.12% | Overall Index closed 1534.6 DOWN 0.05% | Osino Resources Corp 19.47 DOWN 2.41% | Commodities: Gold US$ 2 313.05/OZ UP +0.18% | Copper US$ 4.49/lb DOWN -0.0022 | Zinc US$ 2 896.10/T DOWN -0.52% | Brent Crude Oil US$ 84.77/BBP UP +0.57% | Platinum US$ 979.56/OZ UP +0.55% Sport results: Premier League: Crystal Palace 4 vs 0 Manchester United SerieA: Udinese 1 vs 1 Napoli | Salernitana 1 vs 2 Atalanta Weather: Katima Mulilo: 13° | 33° Rundu: 14° | 33° Eenhana: 15° | 34° Oshakati: 17° | 34° Ruacana: 19° | 35° Tsumeb: 17° | 32° Otjiwarongo: 15° | 31° Omaruru: 19° | 33° Windhoek: 15° | 29° Gobabis: 16° | 30° Henties Bay: 15° | 18° Wind speed: 21km/h, Wind direction: S, Low tide: 10:06, High tide: 04:02, Low Tide: 22:18, High tide: 16:30 Swakopmund: 15° | 17° Wind speed: 25km/h, Wind direction: SW, Low tide: 10:04, High tide: 04:00, Low Tide: 22:16, High tide: 16:28 Walvis Bay: 15° | 21° Wind speed: 28km/h, Wind direction: SW, Low tide: 10:04, High tide: 03:59, Low Tide: 22:16, High tide: 16:27 Rehoboth: 18° | 30° Mariental: 22° | 32° Keetmanshoop: 18° | 32° Aranos: 20° | 32° Lüderitz: 12° | 22° Ariamsvlei: 16° | 31° Oranjemund: 10° | 18° Luanda: 25° | 27° Gaborone: 14° | 29° Lubumbashi: 15° | 28° Mbabane: 14° | 30° Maseru: 11° | 26° Antananarivo: 11° | 22° Lilongwe: 16° | 27° Maputo: 17° | 31° Windhoek: 15° | 29° Cape Town: 13° | 16° Durban: 20° | 33° Johannesburg: 17° | 25° Dar es Salaam: 23° | 30° Lusaka: 15° | 28° Harare: 13° | 27° Economic Indicators: Currency: GBP to NAD 23.01 | EUR to NAD 19.85 | CNY to NAD 2.56 | USD to NAD 18.51 | DZD to NAD 0.14 | AOA to NAD 0.02 | BWP to NAD 1.31 | EGP to NAD 0.38 | KES to NAD 0.14 | NGN to NAD 0.01 | ZMW to NAD 0.67 | ZWL to NAD 0.04 | BRL to NAD 3.64 | RUB to NAD 0.2 | INR to NAD 0.22 | USD to DZD 134.52 | USD to AOA 834.06 | USD to BWP 13.64 | USD to EGP 47.29 | USD to KES 130.48 | USD to NGN 1404.8 | USD to ZAR 18.51 | USD to ZMW 27.25 | USD to ZWL 321 | Stock Exchange: JSE All Share Index 77177.44 Up +0.32% | Namibian Stock Exchange (NSX) Overall Index 1714.65 Down -0.07% | Casablanca Stock Exchange (CSE) MASI 13418.67 Up +0.32% | Egyptian Exchange (EGX) 30 Index 25988.93 Down -1.67% | Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE) DCI Same 0 | NSX: MTC 7.75 SAME | Anirep 8.99 SAME | Capricorn Investment group 17.34 SAME | FirstRand Namibia Ltd 49 DOWN 0.50% | Letshego Holdings (Namibia) Ltd 4.1 UP 2.50% | Namibia Asset Management Ltd 0.7 SAME | Namibia Breweries Ltd 31.49 UP 0.03% | Nictus Holdings - Nam 2.22 SAME | Oryx Properties Ltd 12.1 UP 1.70% | Paratus Namibia Holdings 11.99 SAME | SBN Holdings 8.45 SAME | Trustco Group Holdings Ltd 0.48 SAME | B2Gold Corporation 47.34 DOWN 1.50% | Local Index closed 677.62 UP 0.12% | Overall Index closed 1534.6 DOWN 0.05% | Osino Resources Corp 19.47 DOWN 2.41% | Commodities: Gold US$ 2 313.05/OZ UP +0.18% | Copper US$ 4.49/lb DOWN -0.0022 | Zinc US$ 2 896.10/T DOWN -0.52% | Brent Crude Oil US$ 84.77/BBP UP +0.57% | Platinum US$ 979.56/OZ UP +0.55%