The eighth meeting of BRICS countries' leaders will be held over the weekend in Goa, India, which shows continued progress of cooperation.
Western countries have always been skeptical toward non-Western international cooperation, and their opinions on the Goa summit are no different.
Since the establishment of BRICS, speculations of disunity among the countries and decline in their power have emerged one after another. However, the truth is that cooperation among the countries has continued to be strengthened and institutionalized. Even though growth in the emerging markets is slowing and Russia and Brazil have even witnessed a contraction, compared with the situation in the West, BRICS countries still hold comparative advantages for development.
The West suspects that BRICS is an organization against the Group of Seven, but this view comes from narrow-minded zero-sum mentality. BRICS countries all have their own objectives and problems to address, and cooperation, not confrontation, is the aim of their grouping together. No BRICS country shares exactly the same interests with the West, but they have no interest in uniting to confront the West.
Western countries are still the most powerful in the world, and BRICS countries attach great importance to their ties with the West. Even Russia, with fiercest disagreements with the West, won't shut the door to improve relations with the US and EU. The West should not view anything non-Western as anti-Western or simply take others' pursuit of interest as confrontation.
The world is diverse, and differences coexist and overlap. Confrontation is not the theme of the 21st century. The notion that the world has been split into G7 and BRICS is not only untrue but also misleading, and only breeds tension.
BRICS countries themselves are different in many aspects. China and India have lived with territorial disputes, but the geopolitical contention between them is mostly hyped by some ill-intentioned people. The BRICS is not targeted against anyone, and disagreements among its member countries are minor issues. Cooperation is the norm, and disagreements are natural.
The notion of one country leading an international organization for geopolitical purposes belongs to the era of Cold War. In the 21st century, cooperation should be inclusive, not exclusive.
BRICS countries boast rich natural and human resources, huge markets and policy potential. As political stability expands in emerging countries, the late-developer advantage will help them overcome obstacles. It's almost certain that the BRICS countries will maintain a faster pace of economic development in the mid to long term compared with the developed ones.