Russia has set out proposals for a unified depository and clearance system for BRICS countries, as it seeks to persuade member nations to deepen financial cooperation without the involvement of the West.

President Vladimir Putin is hosting the first summit since BRICS expanded to nine members in January, with the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia joining Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa in the organization. He said Wednesday that the group’s development showed that a “multipolar world” is emerging, in a challenge to the existing US-dominated global order.

While it’s technically feasible, there’s little sign most BRICS members beyond sanctioned Russia and Iran are interested in joining a common depository, said Oleg Vyugin, a former top Bank of Russia official.

Russia has a clear interest in developing alternative financial structures to bypass unprecedented sanctions imposed by the US and its Group of Seven allies after Putin ordered the February 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Alternative payment systems “may not provide the immunity from sanctions that is anticipated,” said Tom Keatinge, director of the Centre for Finance and Security at the Royal United Services Institute in London. “With the US — and increasingly the UK and EU — developing sanctions and export control mechanisms that have extraterritorial reach, Western sanctions could still have an impact.”

Officials from central banks of BRICS states next plan to discuss the unified payment system in December, according to the person familiar.

While the process is challenging and slow, as individual countries have different technological and security protocols as well as laws and financial regulations, a partially integrated payment system is a possibility and could boost trade between BRICS members by 5%-7%, the person said.

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  • RubicTopaz@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    While it’s technically feasible, there’s little sign most BRICS members beyond sanctioned Russia and Iran are interested in joining a common depository

    And that’s why I don’t mind the talks of more western sanctions on China. They’d have more incentive to go through with this that way.

    Sanctions on the other member states like India and Brazil would probably hurt their working class too much though…

    • merthyr1831
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      21 hours ago

      Maybe a total boycott of Russian economy would’ve had some domestic response, but in reality the only people sanctioning the Russian economy are the US and EU, which in itself represents a fraction of the world population and its economic output. The vast majority of the world’s countries continued trading with Russia as usual, if not encouraged trade as Russia offers more favourable deals that the US and EU are unwilling to counter.

      If the EU/US bloc was genuinely interested in anything other than a forever war to boost their military industrial complexes, they’d have put some of their economic power on the line to support global adoption of sanctions, but instead it is backfiring as BRICS slowly (but very surely) becomes a truly independent economic order of its own creation.

      • andyburke@fedia.io
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        21 hours ago

        Russia could withdraw from the country they invaded, too. That might be a much quicker solution.

        • stink@lemmygrad.ml
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          20 hours ago

          Ukraine could have not bombed the people of Donetsk? Russia is liberating Ukraine from the Nazis.