Reformed Multilateralism: Shaping a New World Order

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This article is part of our special report EU-India relations 2024: what lies ahead?.

Multilateralism is suffering an unprecedented crisis, with multilateral institutions increasingly unable to deal effectively with geopolitical and other socio-economic and financial challenges. Against this backdrop, the G20 remains the best forum to pursue reform of financial and economic multilateral institutions to modernise the outdated 1945 global architecture, says T.S. Tirumurti.

T.S. Tirumurti was India’s Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations in New York (2020-2022) and President of the UN Security Council for August 2021.

Reformed multilateralism was first articulated by Prime Minister Modi at the Leaders Retreat in BRICS Summit 2018 in Johannesburg, South Africa. It was underlined at that time that BRICS was formed ten years earlier, inter alia, to push the reform agenda on multilateralism and in multilateral bodies which were not reflective of contemporary realities i.e., to give greater voice in governance to other major economies like BRICS. The idea found ready resonance with the then BRICS Chair, President Cyril Ramaphosa, and with Brazil. But the other two were more circumspect regarding the concept of reformed multilateralism.

Roadblocks to Multilateral Reforms

The phrase “reform of multilateral system” crept into the BRICS text only in 2019 in Brazil. But, by this time, BRICS was being weighed down by its own internal contradictions on the reform agenda. As External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar said recently “As the international order evolves, this desire to selectively retain elements of the 1945 situation while transforming others – and we see that in the UN as well–complicates world politics.” China, and to a much lesser extent Russia, were willing to go for reform of World War II institutions only as long as it suited their objectives. Their objectives did not go as far as embracing the desire of the three IBSA countries (India, Brazil and South Africa) to become permanent members of the UN Security Council. While BRICS certainly notched up achievements like the New Development Bank and Contingency Reserve Agreement, it could have become a strong voice for reforms but for these contradictions.

The UN Security Council stands diminished for various reasons most of which can be traced back to its unrepresentative and anachronistic nature. For example, nearly 70% of the agenda of the Council concerns Africa. But without permanent African representation, what credibility does the Council have if former colonial masters (however well-intentioned they may be) decide what is good for Africa? Or the new ‘development’ and/or “security” partners decide what is good for Africa? As Dr Jaishankar mentioned in the UN General Assembly “It is also perceived as deeply unfair, denying entire continents and regions a voice in a forum that deliberates their future.” Reform has become even more urgent since the Council now is taking an expansive view of what constitutes international peace and security by including purely socio-economic and environmental issues under this rubric as well so that the P-5 can become arbiters of others’ destiny without representation. This is clearly not desirable. The Council needs to be reformed to reflect contemporary realities by bringing in more permanent members from developing countries. But with a group of ‘nay sayers’ determined to block any reform of the Council, it has been a futile exercise for 14 years to push for reform in the so-called Inter-governmental Negotiating Committee set up by the UN General Assembly.

Rise of Plurilateralism

Inability of multilateral institutions to deal effectively with geopolitical and other socio-economic and financial challenges, which includes lack of reforms in IMF, World Bank and WTO, has spawned several plurilateral groups seeking to address some specific areas or regions of interest. For them, it is a way to negotiate new rules and regulations and influence the larger context of multilateralism. This is a direct fall out of the burgeoning variety of challenges and the inability of current multilateral governance structures to tackle them. If China and Chinese-led multilateral institutions have started stepping into the multilateral financial and economic space, it’s because of the procrastination of the developed world to ensure a more inclusive and considered decision-making in IMF and multilateral banks. The expansion of the New Development Bank is an effort to address this gap as well. The downside has been that plurilateral groups have largely been formed by bigger high-income countries to influence multilateral architecture in their favour, making it even more difficult for the smaller developing countries in the Global South to have any influence in the outcome. Plurilaterallism per se cannot usher in the reformed multilateralism we seek.

However, multilateralism goes beyond the UN and economic and financial institutions. In the Ukraine conflict, we have seen the weaponization of almost everything and that too, unilaterally. In other regions, we have also witnessed how unilateral sanctions affect large parts of the developing world. That is because of the confidence that those undertaking such unilateral “weaponization” will never be called to account. Their actions in Ukraine have been taken in disregard of the welfare and interests of the developing world whether oil, food, fertilizers or finance.

We need to induce greater accountability for such actions. Consequently, we need a reformed and inclusive multilateral architecture to prevent this “weaponization” of almost everything.

Is G20 Really the Answer?

That brings us to G20. Can G20 become the fulcrum around which the multilateral reform process revolves? In some ways it already has, by its very existence. G20 is now probably the most representative of the various plurilateral groups. All regions find representation though EU is overrepresented, Africa is under-represented and there is no small island state in sight. Its creation in the aftermath of the economic crisis of 1997-98, and its decisions including during the 2008 economic crisis and now during COVID have had their desired socio-economic and environmental impact. Since it works by consensus, the G20 countries are forced to compromise for arriving at an acceptable decision. In effect, everyone has a veto and no one has a veto. Consensus decisions make for prompt implementation even if these decisions don’t necessarily have a binding force. Therefore, process-wise, G20 has all the ingredients for replication with proper tweaking of the numbers and the membership list. But substance-wise? There can be little doubt that G20 remains the best forum to pursue reform of financial and economic multilateral institutions and banks and effect changes in the outdated 1945 architecture. For example, the drying up of funds, inter alia, for tackling Covid fall-out, for strengthening climate action and for pursuing SDGs remains a serious concern.

Donors understandably do not want others to decide on how their money should be deployed, especially when there are burgeoning and conflicting demands from conflicts, new and old, and huge humanitarian requirements especially after Covid. We have seen how the COVAX Facility failed when the West decided to hoard vaccines for themselves and did not put in any funding into COVAX, thereby depriving the Global South of the much-needed life-saving vaccines. G20 provides just the right mix and balance to deal with these issues in a serious and inclusive manner, initiate action to reform and address these gaps in governance.

The Ukraine conflict has also changed the way some have started seeing G20. Just as work was stopped by the EU, the US and the West in the UN and the UN Security Council was rendered impotent by the Russian veto, so have the outcomes from the various G20 work streams been stymied under the Indonesian presidency. G7 countries have so far not let consensus decisions be reached in any work stream barring one. Rest are all Chair’s summaries, which have far less binding force. Politicisation of G20 is now in full public glare and G20 has also been weaponized! We now see G20 taking hesitant steps into political issues and the door has been pried open.

Therefore, when it comes to how much and how far G20 can go to bring about reformed multilateralism, the jury is still out. But the fact that G20 has become a more representative and inclusive governance structure is undeniable. And the fact that all major powers have taken the G20 seriously augurs well for the future. The centre of gravity has shifted towards G20. Maybe the seeds of UN Security Council’s expansion have unwittingly been sown.

Southern Presidencies

In a happy coincidence, we are now witnessing four consecutive years of G20 presidency by developing countries – Indonesia, India, Brazil and South Africa, which gives the Global South the possibility of leaving their imprint on the themes and deliberations in G20. The least these presidencies can do is to address the issues of the developing world in a more direct and positive way.

India’s presidency, therefore, gives a unique opportunity to channelize the demands and interests of the Global South into G20 deliberations. It gives an opportunity to handle an almost universal fall-out from the Ukraine conflict. And India’s priorities for G20 reflects the keen interest we have in reformed multilateralism. One of our five priorities is ‘Need for reformed 21st century institutions.’ No doubt that this will be a peg to hang some important reform initiatives for the developing world. Showcasing some of India’s success stories for public good, like our digital and green initiatives, will be a game changer. Further, India has invited 9 guest countries to bring greater balance in the participation. Overall, India is particularly well poised to lead the G20 with an agenda for reform, greener and gender sensitive development, inclusivity, growth, change and innovation.

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