Yahoo – AFP,
21 July 2015
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The bank's
opening comes two weeks after a BRICS summit hosted by
Russian President
Vladimir Putin (AFP Photo/Alexander Nemenov)
|
A new $100
billion international bank dedicated to the emerging BRICS countries opened in
China's commercial hub Shanghai on Tuesday, officials said, as an alternative
to other multilateral lenders.
The
"New Development Bank", backed by the so-called emerging BRICS
nations Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, has been viewed as a
challenge to Washington-based institutions.
The NDB's
website explicitly describes it as an "alternative to the existing
US-dominated World Bank and International Monetary Fund" which will
address needs for infrastructure and sustainable development.
It comes as
Beijing -- which is seeking a greater role on the global political stage to
mirror its rise to become the world's second-largest economy -- is also setting
up a separate Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).
Chinese
Finance Minister Lou Jiwei played down the competitive aspect.
"The
NDB will supplement the existing international financial system in a healthy
way and explore innovations in governance models," he told the NDB's
opening ceremony in Shanghai, as quoted by the official Xinhua news agency.
The bank
says on its website that it will have authorised capital of $100 billion, with
$50 billion paid in initially.
Xinhua
quoted bank president K. V. Kamath, formerly a private banker in India, as
saying the institution's management was "working on initiation of
operations", including "making business policy" and
"developing project preparations".
Operations
would begin late this year or early in 2016, he added.
The opening
comes two weeks after a BRICS summit hosted by Russian President Vladimir
Putin.
Moscow --
which has suffered huge currency fluctuations and struggled to attract
investors since the outbreak of the crisis in Ukraine -- sees the bank and a
BRICS currency reserve pool as alternative global financial institutions.
At the time
of the summit, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in a statement that
BRICS "illustrates a new polycentric system of international
relations" demonstrating the increasing influence of "new centres of
power".
'Financial order'
The BRICS
nations, which represent 40 percent of the world's population, formally agreed
to establish the bank at a meeting in Brazil in July last year.
The World
Bank said it hopes to work with the newcomer.
"We
are committed to working closely with the New Development Bank and other
multilateral institutions, offering to share our knowledge and to co-finance
infrastructure projects," World Bank president Jim Yong Kim said in a
statement.
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China, the
world's second-largest economy, is also leading the setting up of
another new
multilateral lender, the Asian Infrastructure Infrastructure Bank (AIIB)
(AFP
Photo/Johannes Eisele)
|
The
regionally-focused Asian Development Bank also said it would "look
forward" to working with the NDB.
Chinese
analysts denied the BRICS bank was aimed at challenging other multilateral
agencies.
"It's
a complement, instead of a challenge, to existing international
institutions," Li Daxiao, chief economist of Yingda Securities, told AFP.
"It
can help strengthen the currency markets and maintain a stable financial order
through the internal stabilisation of the BRICS countries," he said.
The other
new Chinese-based multilateral lender, the AIIB, will be headquartered in
Beijing and China will be its biggest shareholder with about 30 percent,
according to the legal framework signed late last month by 50 founding member
countries.
Major
European and Asian economies including Germany, Britain, France and Australia
have joined the AIIB, but the United States and Japan -- the world's largest
and third-largest economies, respectively -- have declined to do so.



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