India's BRICS Presidency: Push for Reform, Implementation and Global South Voice
India's BRICS presidency aims to push the grouping from a consultative platform to an implementation-oriented institution, with priorities including a permanent secretariat, deeper business linkages and digital public infrastructure for the Global South.
India's presidency of BRICS arrives at a consequential moment for the global order. Traditional multilateral institutions are struggling to respond to geopolitical conflict, economic fragmentation and rapid technological disruption. In this vacuum, BRICS is increasingly viewed by countries of the Global South as a vehicle for reforming global governance and creating more representative institutions.
For India, the presidency is more than a diplomatic chairmanship. The government has positioned BRICS not as a confrontational anti-Western bloc but as a platform for constructive multipolarity, focused on inclusive global growth, human-centric globalisation and institutional reform. This balanced positioning has enhanced India's credibility within the grouping and beyond.
The Indian government is expected to push for stronger institutional architecture, including potential support for a formal BRICS secretariat to improve continuity, coordination and implementation. The aim is to move BRICS from a consultative platform to an implementation-oriented institution, building on the playbook from India's G-20 presidency and the Voice of Global South Summits.
India is also expected to deepen business-to-business and people-to-people engagement, recognising that the long-term success of BRICS rests on commercial, technological and societal linkages, not summit diplomacy alone. India's digital public infrastructure — Aadhaar, UPI, ONDC and DigiLocker — gives it a unique credential to lead conversations on digital governance for emerging economies.
The geo-economic frame is intentional. BRICS countries account for a substantial share of global growth, energy resources, manufacturing and population. India's emphasis on supply-chain cooperation, payment-system interoperability and trade facilitation aligns with the priorities of emerging economies in a fractured global order.
Exam angle: Useful for IR and economic-diplomacy questions. Remember the framing — constructive multipolarity, not anti-Western — the proposed secretariat reform, the digital public infrastructure linkage, and the continuity from India's G-20 presidency to the BRICS chair.
Key Points to Remember
- India is in the BRICS presidency chair
- Framing: constructive multipolarity, not anti-Western bloc
- Priorities: institutional secretariat, digital public infrastructure, supply-chain cooperation
- Builds on India's G-20 presidency and Voice of Global South Summits
- BRICS countries: substantial share of global growth, energy, manufacturing, population
Exam Relevance
Relevant for UPSC Prelims & Mains (International Relations — multilateral institutions, India's foreign policy, Global South), State PCS.
Related Articles
Quad Foreign Ministers Meet in New Delhi, Expand Cooperation on Minerals, Maritime …
At a foreign ministers’ meeting in New Delhi, the Quad expanded cooperation on critical minerals, …
West Asia Conflict Continues as US, Iran and Israel Exchange Strikes Amid …
The US, Iran and Israel exchanged strikes in late May 2026 despite a fragile truce, …
Quad Foreign Ministers to Meet in Delhi
Quad Foreign Ministers (India, US, Australia, Japan) meet in Delhi, hosted by EAM Jaishankar, for …
Xi Jinping Hails China's 'Unbreakable' Friendship with Pakistan
Xi Jinping called China-Pakistan friendship 'unbreakable' while meeting PM Shehbaz Sharif — a relationship India …
Quad Foreign Ministers Meet in New Delhi to Revive Stalled Summit and …
On 26 May 2026, foreign ministers of the Quad — India, the US, Japan and …