BRICS is an important economic bloc of major emerging economies. It currently brings together eleven countries: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Indonesia. Together, BRICS represents a large share of the world’s population, GDP, trade, energy resources and consumer markets. Therefore, its importance lies in giving the Global South a stronger voice in the global economic order.
The importance of BRICS as an economic bloc can be understood through the following points:
1. Voice of Emerging Economies
- BRICS challenges the dominance of Western-led institutions by demanding reforms in the IMF, World Bank, WTO and UN-linked economic governance. It gives developing countries a platform to raise issues such as climate finance, fair trade, technology transfer, food security and energy security.
- According to the official BRICS 2026 platform, BRICS countries together account for around 49.5% of the world’s population, 40% of global GDP and 26% of global trade. This makes the bloc economically significant in global decision-making.
2. Alternative Development Finance
- The New Development Bank (NDB) is one of the most important achievements of BRICS. It funds infrastructure and sustainable development projects in member countries and other emerging economies. This helps to reduce dependence on traditional Western-dominated financial institutions.
- For example, NDB financing supports projects in transport, water, renewable energy and urban infrastructure.
3. Trade and Investment Cooperation
- BRICS promotes trade, investment, industrial cooperation and supply-chain diversification among emerging economies. As global trade faces protectionism and geopolitical tensions, BRICS offers a platform for South-South economic cooperation.
- For India, BRICS provides access to large markets, energy suppliers, minerals, food resources and investment opportunities.
4. Energy and Resource Security
- With countries like Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and UAE, BRICS now includes major energy producers. This strengthens cooperation in oil, gas, renewable energy, critical minerals and energy transition.
- For India, this is important because energy security is central to economic growth.
5. De-dollarisation and Financial Cooperation
- BRICS countries have discussed trade in local currencies, alternative payment systems and reduced dependence on the US dollar. This can lower transaction costs and protect emerging economies from currency shocks and unilateral sanctions.
6. Global South Leadership
- BRICS has become a platform for issues affecting the Global South, including poverty reduction, digital public infrastructure, climate justice, health security and inclusive development.
Limitations
However, BRICS also faces challenges:
- India-China border tensions affect trust.
- Members have different political systems and strategic interests.
- Russia’s sanctions and geopolitical isolation create complications.
- There is no binding economic integration like the EU.
- China’s economic dominance may create imbalance within the bloc.
Conclusion
Thus, BRICS is important as an economic bloc because it strengthens the collective bargaining power of emerging economies, promotes alternative development finance, supports trade cooperation and pushes for a fairer global economic order. However, its effectiveness depends on internal coordination, institutional strengthening and balancing national interests with collective goals. For India, BRICS remains a useful platform to advance economic interests while promoting Global South cooperation.





