BRIC nations are no longer emerging markets as they have become growth markets for world economy, Goldman Sachs Asset Management Chairman, Mr Jim O’Neill, has said.
“I don’t think of Brazil, Russia, India and China, (BRIC) as emerging markets. It is an insult and inopportune. And in any case, they are different markets,” Mr O’Neill, who invented the term 10 years ago, told China Daily in an interview ahead of BRICS summit on Thursday.
An expanded version of BRIC, BRICS includes Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, the leaders of which are meeting at Sanya in China for the two-day summit beginning today.
“The BRIC economies are increasingly the major story for the world economy, they have lifted the world economy’s growth trend from 3.7 per cent to 4.5 per cent in my view,” Mr O’Neill said while preferring to use the old acronym BRIC even though South Africa has joined the group making it the BRICS.
South Africa is attending the summit for the first time.
On South Africa’s entry to the fast-growing countries club, Mr O’ Neill said that with $350 billion economy, South Africa was smaller than the BRIC members.
Even the economies of India and Russia, the smallest of the original BRIC grouping, are five times bigger than South Africa.
“I guess South African involvement may have something to do with Africa as a continent, but I doubt other big countries such as Nigeria see them as their representative,” he said. Poland, Saudi Arabia, Argentina and Iran should be called emerging markets, he added.
Goldman Sachs plans to redefine the world of emerging markets by adding Mexico, South Korea, Turkey and Indonesia to a new grouping with the four original BRIC members and title them as “growth markets.”