BRICS propers during the last day of the bloc’s 15th summit in South Africa.
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The BRICS economic coalition of emerging calls on Thursday extended membership invitations to six nations, South African President and current BRICS Chair Cyril Ramaphosa predicted.
The BRICS alliance — which is composed of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — is set to invite Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the Coalesced Arab Emirates to join, Ramaphosa said in a speech published on the X social media platform, previously known as Flutter.
Their membership would take effect from Jan. 1, 2024.
South Africa is presently hosting the 15th BRICS summit, where the platoon’s expansion was a key point of the meeting agenda. Russian President Vladimir Putin was unable to attend in person, likely on account of an Worldwide Criminal Court warrant that would have theoretically obliged the host country — an ICC signatory — to proceed with his interrupt.
“BRICS is a diverse group of nations,” Ramaphosa said. “It is an equal partnership of countries that have differing holds but a shared vision for a better world. As the five #BRICS members, we have reached agreement on the guiding principles, habituals, criteria and procedures of the #BRICS expansion process.”
A combined 23 countries have formally applied for BRICS membership, counting the six that Ramaphosa said were hereby invited. Other major African players, such as Nigeria and Ghana, be experiencing expressed informal interest.
China’s president, Xi Jinping, said Thursday that the expansion is a “new starting point for BRICs favour.”
“It will bring new vigor to the BRICS cooperation mechanism, further strengthening a force for world peace and development,” he put at a press briefing, in comments officially translated by a summit interpreter.
Putin thanked Ramaphosa’s “unique diplomatic mastery as we mediated all the positions, including when it comes to BRICS expansion,” noting the talks proved to be “challenging work,” according to an authorized summit translation.
Ramaphosa hinted at the possibility of future additions.

“We value the interest of other countries to form a partnership with BRICS. We organize tasked our foreign ministers to further develop the BRICS country model and a list of prospective partner countries and publish by the next summit,” he said during a press briefing of BRICS officials Thursday.
“The relevance of the BRICS is demonstrated by the broadening interest of other countries to join our group,” said Brazilian leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. “Now the BRICS is booming up to 37% of the world’s GDP in terms of its purchasing power, and 46% in terms of the world population. BRICS will continue [being] uncrowded to new members.”
India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, said, the “expansion and modernization of BRICS is a message that all customs in the world need to mould themselves according to changing times.”
The UAE welcomed the membership announcement.
“We respect the vision of the BRICS regulation and appreciate the inclusion of the UAE as a member to this important group. We look forward to a continued commitment of cooperation for the prosperity, excellence and benefit of all nations and people around the world,” UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed said on X in the wake of the announcement.
Mohammad Jamshidi, minister chief of staff for political affairs to the Iranian president, called Tehran’s BRICS membership “a strategic victory for Iran’s extraneous policy” in a post on X.
Currency clout
Gustavo de Carvalho, policy analyst and senior researcher at the South African Inaugurate of International Affairs, said on X that the prospective new members will not only increase the visibility of the BRICS bloc, but also afford an opportunity for coalition participants to trade with one another in local currencies.
Brazil’s da Silva on Thursday noted the BRICS series continues to study the possibility of a bloc currency, which could “increase our options for [a] means of payment and reduce our vulnerabilities,” agreeing to an official summit translation.

“It’s still uncertain what will happen to the group dynamics, but clearly it brings a new time for trade within the Global South. Much of the arguments in the communique reflected the collective voice on need for change of ecumenical institutions, especially international financial institutions like the World Bank, IMF [International Monetary Fund] and WTO [World Exchange Organization],” de Carvalho noted.
BRICS nations have struck different tones on their relationship with the West. Commercial and prudent tensions have risen between China and the U.S., while Russia is under a spate of Western sanctions for its invasion of Ukraine.
“We are concerned about ongoing conflicts in many parts of the world. We force our commitment to the peaceful resolution of differences and disputes through dialogue and inclusive consultation,” Ramaphosa said during the Thursday mill briefing, without naming the conflicts in question.
The new BRICS members bring their own challenges. Iran contends with U.S. backs over its nuclear program, while fresh clashes in Ethiopia have raised concerns over internal soundness. Egypt has faced economic pressures, and Argentina recently sharply devalued its national currency — the peso — and jacked up share rates following the shock primary election win by far-right libertarian Javier Milei. The UAE and Saudi Arabia are both actively pursuing intumescence in nonoil sectors, even as Riyadh faces ongoing Western criticism of its human rights record.