The Political Economy of the BRICS Countries. Группа авторов

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and Roy, 2016: 589). This often leads to political capture of government policy that has a detrimental impact on the quality of growth. An analysis of the rise in the number of billionaires in India illustrates the effect of political capture on income inequality. The number of billionaires in India increased from two in the mid-1990s to 46 in 2012. Of these, 20 billionaires controlled firms involved in sectors considered ‘rent-thick’. Between 2003 and 2008, the share of national wealth held by these billionaires increased from 0.9% to 9.9%. These sectors included mining, infrastructure, telecom, media, and real estate, all of which were heavily regulated. Most of these billionaires were from social groups who were traditionally associated with business and none from groups which were at the lower end of the caste spectrum (Gandhi and Walton, 2012: 10–11). These are also some of the sectors where numerous instances of corruption in award of licenses, which led to significant revenue losses, have been detected by the national auditor. Corruption has also been one of the biggest problems which has hindered effective implementation of social welfare programs in India, especially in the provision of subsidized food (Jha, 2014: 228).

      China, because of Communist Party rule, has not developed formal legal and market institutions that limit government power through review by an independent judiciary. Personal relationships, the guanxi, still play a major role in government decision-making process, making policy vulnerable to political capture (Li, 2008). With the advent of economic reform, the instances of ‘high-level’ corruption spread to higher levels of the Chinese government while corruption at lower levels remained more or less then same as before (Wedeman, 2004: 920–921). The process of liberalization and opening up also brought it with the rise of ‘princelings’ in China, the children and sons/daughters-in-law of high ranking officials who came to occupy high positions in the Chinese Communist Party (Choi, 2012: 971). The current anti-corruption campaign by the Chinese President Xi Jinping has stressed the importance of the drive to achieve economic objectives. It was driven in large part by a realization that public perceptions of corruption were affecting the legitimacy of the Communist Party. A PEW Poll in 2016 found that corruption ranked higher in the public’s concerns than income inequality, crime, food adulteration, and pollution (Chen and Zong, 2017). The anti-corruption campaign has resulted in 9% of the membership of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party being detained on corruption charges between December 2012 and October 2017. More than 150 top-ranking officials in the bureaucracy, military, and private-sector businesses have lost their jobs because of the campaign (Mitchell, 2017). In particular, the campaign is likely to help small entrepreneurs increase their investment since corruption is often one of the biggest hurdles to additional investment for them (Gianetti et al., 2017).

      South Africa inherited a deeply flawed economic system when it became a democratic country in 1994. Poverty was widespread, society was deeply divided, and the government bureaucracy and infrastructure that the new government inherited were designed to serve only a minority of the population (Pillay, 2004: 588). Policies enacted to address the problems of economic inequality afflicting the country further entrenched rather than reduced inequality. Government policy initiatives stressed a system of racial preferences in ownership and employment that easily lent itself to political capture. An increase in black ownership of firms was achieved through debt-funded purchases of equity by a small number of black entrepreneurs (Handley, 2005: 220). Many of these entrepreneurs were closely connected to the ruling African National Congress. In the absence of sufficient number of blacks with the requisite skills to take advantage of the opportunities provided by BEE legislation, the positive impact has been more in terms of number of blacks in senior board positions rather than in employment. The major benefits in terms of BEE legislation have accrued to a newly emerging ‘black middle class’, which has benefited from increased opportunities for employment, rather than to poorer blacks (Horwitz and Jain, 2011: 314; Iheduru, 2004).

      Conclusion

      It is not surprising that the BRICS economies would seek to play a much greater role in global politics, given the rapid growth of their economies, and their increasing share of global economic output. With international political and economic institutions still structured to reflect immediate post-World War II economic realities, it is also clear that international reform of these institutions is long overdue. The ability of the BRICS economies to influence the G7 to initiate these reforms is, however, constrained both by differences between them and also by their domestic vulnerabilities. While all the five BRICS economies have seen periods of rapid economic growth, continuing income inequalities and the non-inclusive nature of their growth make them susceptible to domestic instability. Rising economic inequality could undermine domestic stability, further reducing their ability to work together internationally. The effectiveness of BRICS as an emerging power bloc might be more apparent than real.

      References

      Alston, L. J., M. Marcus Andre, M. Bernardo and P. Carlos (2016). “Why countries transition? the case of Brazil”, Atlantic Economic Journal, 44: 197–224.

      Ardichvili, A., Z. Elena and M. Vera (2012). “Human capital development: Comparative analysis of BRICS”, European Journal of Training and Development, 36(2/3): 213–233.

      Arrighi, G., A. Nicole and S. Ben (2010). “Accumulation by dispossession and its limits: The Southern African paradigm revisited”, Studies in Comparative International Development, 45: 410–438.

      Armijo, L. E. (2007). “The BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China)

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