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Xi urges BRICS countries to cement confidence in growth

17 November 2015

ANTALYA, Turkey, Nov. 15 (Xinhua) — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sunday called on BRICS countries to strengthen confidence in growth and boost coordination within the emerging-market bloc so as to jointly cope with global challenges.

Acknowledging that the five countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — are facing increasing complexities and difficulties and experiencing slower growth, Xi proposed that they upgrade their economic structures for long-term development.

“China stands ready to share development opportunities with other BRICS countries and lift our economic cooperation,” he said at a BRICS leaders’ meeting held in the Turkish resort city of Antalya on the sidelines of a Group of 20 (G20) summit.

“Pure gold fears no fire,” Xi stressed. “As long as we hold firm confidence and strengthen coordination, the BRICS countries will surely sail through winds and waves.”

This year’s G20 summit, the 10th of its kind since 2008, comes as the world economy is still being held back by slow, uneven recovery and shortfalls in demand, investment and infrastructure.

The Chinese economy expanded 6.9 percent in the first three quarters of this year, which contributed as high as about one third to the global growth although the third-quarter figure — also 6.9 percent — posted the lowest reading in six years, according to Chinese officials.

On a larger scale, the emerging-market countries still contribute to more than half of the global growth today.
“We are still the important engine for the world’s economic growth,” Xi told other leaders.

The president suggested the BRICS members jointly help improve global economic governance by forestalling short-term financial risks within the G20 framework and increasing the representation and voice of developing countries.

“We should press ahead with the transition of the G20 mechanism from crisis response to long-term governance,” said Xi, the leader of the world’s second largest economy.

“We need to build an open world economy, oppose trade protectionism, push for the adoption of responsible macroeconomic policies by all G20 members, and jointly expand global demand,” he noted.

The president also wanted the BRICS countries to promote international cooperation and help build a new-type global partnership that is more diversified, open, pragmatic and efficient.

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South African President Jacob Zuma attended the meeting held prior to the G20 summit.

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