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			by James Hall  
			
			November 19, 2014 
			from 
			BATR Website 
			  
			  
			  
			
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			Global trade relationships and 
			agreements are moving in very different directions.  
			  
			
			The public relations press releases hide 
			the undercurrents that are driving the formations of alternative 
			economic alliances. While the G 20, markets its all inclusive 
			umbrella policy forums, the mere formation of 
			a BRICS counterweight 
			forecasts deep and fundamental differences.  
			  
			
			So what is really behind the creation of 
			a different approach to the post WWII dominate U.S. lead model? A 
			clue can be found in an attempt to modify the operations and 
			direction of IMF functions. 
			  
			
			Announced in the Russian press,
			
			BRICS to propose IMF reform at G20 summit, is a pressure attempt 
			to move the center of power away from current synergism. 
			
				
				"At the G20 summit in the Australian 
				city of Brisbane on November 15-16, Russia and other BRICS 
				countries (Brazil, India, China and South Africa) will propose 
				alternative solutions concerning the reform of 
				
				the International 
				Monetary Fund, involving, in particular, gradual implementation 
				of reforms, Russian G20 Sherpa Svetlana Lukash told reporters. 
				  
				
				"The most important thing for us is 
				the still unresolved G20 problem of the IMF reform," Lukash 
				said.  
			 
			
			She recalled the U.S. Congress has yet 
			to ratify the 2010 resolution.  
			
				
				"Not only does it thwart the process 
				of renewing the IMF in accordance with the current reality where 
				we see a big rise in the role of emerging economies. It also 
				prevents the decisions to double the IMF capital from coming 
				into force," she said. 
			 
			
			The appearance of maintaining a working 
			relationship among opposing interests may present an assuring PR 
			message, but who really believes that the path to a new cold war is 
			paved with mutual cooperation?  
			  
			
			Impetus for a parallel financial system 
			is certainly based more on political objective than commerce or 
			economic benefits.  
			  
			
			The Washington Post describes
			
			What the new bank of BRICS is all about in this manner. 
			
				
				"Heads of state from Brazil, Russia, 
				India, China, and South Africa (the so-called BRICS countries)
				
				agreed to establish a New Development Bank (NDB) at their 
				summit meeting.  
				  
				
				They will have a president (an 
				Indian for the first six years), a Board of Governors Chair (a 
				Russian), a Board of Directors Chair (a Brazilian), and a 
				headquarters (in Shanghai).  
				
					
						- 
						
						What is the purpose of this 
						BRICS bank?   
						- 
						
						Why have these countries 
						created it now?   
						- 
						
						And, what implications does 
						it have for the global development-finance landscape?  
					 
				 
				
				The 'what' is relatively 
				straightforward.  
				  
				
				The NDB has been given $50 billion 
				in initial capital. As with similar initiatives in other regions 
				(see below), the BRICS bank appears to work on an equal-share 
				voting basis, with each of the five signatories contributing $10 
				billion.  
				  
				
				The capital base is to be used to 
				finance infrastructure and "sustainable development" projects in 
				the BRICS countries initially, but other low and middle-income 
				countries will be able buy in and apply for funding.  
				  
				
				BRICS countries have also created a 
				$100 billion Contingency Reserve Arrangement (CRA), meant to 
				provide additional liquidity protection to member countries 
				during balance of payments problems.  
				  
				
				The CRA - unlike the pool of 
				contributed capital to the BRICS bank, which is equally shared - 
				is being funded 41 percent by China, 18 percent from Brazil, 
				India, and Russia, and 5 percent from South Africa." 
			 
			  
			
				
				   
			  
			  
			
			China's motivation to participate in 
			BRICS banking is most interesting and revealing.  
			  
			
			Since it is not absolutely essential for 
			China to be a member of BRICS, Gudrun Wacker, from the German 
			Institute for International and Security Affairs presents this 
			finding in a report,
			
			China's role in G20 / BRICS and Implications, may shed an 
			insight on their reasoning. 
			
				
				"The future of BRICS depends on the 
				future performance of the G7/8 and G20: If the G20 develops into 
				a real coordination mechanism, there might be less Chinese 
				interest in BRICS.  
				  
				
				The future prospects of BRICS were 
				presented as less promising than those of the G20, since BRICS 
				will not be able to solve global problems. It is not yet clear 
				whether the main deliverable of BRICS will be directed at 
				cooperation among its members or at third countries.  
				  
				
				While the idea of BRIC as a group 
				was originally picked up by Russia (the invitation to the first 
				summit, as a move toward "extension" of the strategic triangle 
				Russia, China. India?), its members are now all active in 
				certain fields.  
				  
				
				For China, it is also an important 
				effort to emerge from its isolation (Copenhagen climate summit).
				 
				  
				
				Another factor shaping the future of 
				BRICS might be the development of US-China relations: While all 
				interview partners agreed that BRICS does not aim at creating a 
				new, anti-Western world order, it can be seen as a response to 
				the US-led world order." 
			 
			
			The methodology of Mr. Wacker's research 
			relied upon comments from interviews.  
			  
			
			Relying on sentiments that BRICS goal is 
			not bent on developing a counterbalance to Western banking hegemony 
			is poppycock. Geopolitical dimensions in international affairs have 
			Russia as the latest bogyman. Any economic analysis that ignores 
			power brokers desperate attempt to shift the causes of a failing 
			world economy onto the backs of enemy nations is flawed. 
			  
			
			Also, the notion that major economic 
			transnational corporatists operate with altruism for third world 
			countries is sheer lunacy. All these trade organizations are 
			attempts to position vying interests to settle for a subservient 
			role to a subordinate structure under a global debt creation banking 
			system.   
			  
			
			Attempts to scare the populist into 
			believing 
			
			that Global Warming inaction raises 
			specter of
			
			war over climate change are absurd. 
			 
			
				
				"At the G20 summit, other nations 
				overrode host Australia's attempts to keep climate change off 
				the agenda and agreed to call for strong action with the aim of 
				adopting a binding protocol at the Paris conference." 
				 
			 
			
			Such initiatives are pure political "PC" 
			orthodoxy and actually diminish prosperity.   
			  
			
			The great schism in trade among nations 
			is that some countries are not willing to lie down with diseased 
			parasites. This should not be construed to favor the emergence of 
			the BRICS union as a shining future.  
			  
			
			However, what it does purport is that 
			the road to the 
			NWO modeling for globalism by entrenched financial 
			elites has produced opposition. 
			  
			
			Conflict is the normal human condition, 
			and especially when money is used as a medium of world control and 
			domination is the goal. The G20 is useless. Breaking the 
			
			banking 
			monopoly that fosters endless terror and war is the universal 
			objective for the inhabitants of this planet.  
			  
			
			Another unsavory photo op for world 
			leaders just produces more nausea.  
			  
			
			  
			
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