Southeast Asia Has Its Reasons For Pivoting To BRICS


(MENAFN- Asia Times) Southeast Asia's sudden pivot toward the BRICS nations is a global game-changer that few in Washington saw coming.

In recent days, Malaysia detailed its ambitions to join Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. Thailand and Vietnam are also among the Association of Southeast Asian Nations members expressing similar interest.

In Indonesia, there's growing awareness that Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and other“Global South” nations have a point in vying to join this burgeoning intergovernmental organization.

During an interview with Chinese media ahead of Li Qiang's visit to Malaysia, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim declared his intention to join the bloc after it doubled in size over the last year. That dynamic is luring Global South nations - partly by offering access to financing but also by offering a political movement independent of Washington's influence.

The Southeast Asia wrinkle could prove particularly problematic for US President Joe Biden. A hallmark of the Biden era since 2021 has been creating a regional bulwark against China's rising influence and efforts to replace the US dollar in trade and finance.

What we're seeing is a clear rupture in relations between the US and many ASEAN members. This, at a time when Saudi Arabia is looking to phase out the“petrodollar.” Riyadh is intensifying de-dollarization efforts as China, Russia and Iran line up against old alliances.

“A gradual democratization of the global financial landscape may be underway, giving way to a world in which more local currencies can be used for international transactions,” says analyst Hung Tran at the Atlantic Council's Geoeconomics Center.“In such a world, the dollar would remain prominent but without its outsized clout, complemented by currencies such as the Chinese renminbi, the euro and the Japanese yen in a way that's commensurate with the international footprint of their economies.”

Tran notes that“in this context, how Saudi Arabia approaches the petrodollar remains an important harbinger of the financial future.”

Malaysia's journey tells the story. Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim made his global mark as a pro-Western finance minister. That was in the late 1990s, back when Anwar's reformist leanings clashed with the views of then-Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.

Mahathir shut Anwar down. Deputy Premier Anwar was shown the door and later imprisoned. Anwar's efforts to increase competitiveness and level playing fields were also reversed. Mahathir imposed capital controls and circled the wagons around Malaysia Inc.

Now it's Anwar who's turning away from the Adam Smith-inspired policies he once championed - and toward the
BRICS .

“We have made our policy clear and we have made our decision,” Anwar tells Chinese media outlet
Guancha.“We will start the formal process soon. As far as the Global South is concerned, we are fully supportive.”

Anwar gave a shoutout to Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who is determined to end the dollar's dominance.

“Last year, Malaysia had the highest investment ever, but the currency was still attacked,” Anwar explains.“Well, it has eased in the past few weeks. But it doesn't make sense, it goes against basic economic principles.”

Anwar notes that the question is: Why?“A currency that is completely outside the trade system of the two countries and is irrelevant in terms of economic activities in the country, has become dominant, purely because it is used as an international currency,” he says.

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Asia Times

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