The Three Musketeers: Brazil, India and South Africa

Earlier this month, entrepreneurs from Brazil, South Africa, and India founded the Trilateral Business Council. The encounter among representatives of industrial and commercial federations from the three countries took place during the III Meeting of the India, Brazil, and South Africa Dialogue Forum.

The encounter this time happened in the South African legislative capital, Cape Town. The Forum will be held in Brazil in 2006.


The Council will foster the development of an investment network geared to small, medium, and micro-enterprises. This international network will facilitate the countries’ access to industrial and service sectors abroad, so long as the interchange offers advantages to all the parties involved.


The Council will also be able to back grievances in the ambit of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and domestic governmental areas.


The vice-president of International Integration of the National Confederation of Industry (CNI), Luí­s Eulálio Vidigal, who represented the Brazilian private sector, signed the agreement creating the Council.


He said he is optimistic about the possibilities of exchange in different areas:


“In India, especially, the areas of cutting edge technology, pharmaceuticals, computer-related areas, and even those most closely linked to mining; in South Africa, in all these areas there is much to be done.


“Brazil’s industrial park is quite diversified, in addition to our being highly developed in agriculture and agro-industry. In either of these two countries, we would have a big enough opportunity to export a great deal.”


The three countries already make up the G-3, for mutual negotiations. And they share the desire to promote reforms in the United Nations, especially in the Security Council.


Their inclination was reinforced at the Chancellors’ meeting. Brazil’s Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, said he believes important steps were taken to make cooperation more concrete.


“I think that they are increasingly speaking with one voice as three large democracies from three continents. We are obviously not exclusive, and we want to involve more countries in all of this as well, but it is a way to begin a cooperative effort,” the Brazilian Chancellor affirmed.


Since the creation of the IBSA – the abbreviation for the union between India, Brazil, and South Africa – in 2003, the three countries have made advances in political projects in the technological field, such as the defense of free software.


Between 2003 and 2004, trade between Brazil and South Africa grew around 40%, reaching US$ 368 million (R$ 1 billion). Trade between Brazil and India experienced more modest growth, calculated at 17%.


This year, besides business expansion, agreements in the areas of health and oceanography are planned.


Translation: David Silberstein
Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Senate Confirms Brazil’s First Woman – a Confederate Descendant – as Chief Justice

The eleven justices on the Brazilian Supreme Court elect their own Chief Justice for ...

Brazilian couple kissing in public

Brazil: Chasing the Internet While Men Scratch Their Privates in Public

I have a computer bloated with stories and photos meant to be passed on ...

Once Again Brazilian Justice Orders Halt to Amazon’s Belo Monte Dam

A Brazilian judge has ordered a halt to construction of a multi-billion-dollar dam project ...

Brazil’s Bel Chocolates Planning a Sweet Attack in the Middle East

Of the 20 countries to which the company Bel Chocolates, located in the city ...

I Don’t Vote in Brazil and I’m Proud of It

Democracy is beautiful, isn’t it true? Too bad that something as dirty as elections ...

Brazil Starts Selling the Not-That-Cheap Linux-Powered Popular Computer

Brazil’s state-owned Caixa Econômica Federal (CEF, Federal Savings Bank) started offering this Monday, November ...

A Mere One-Quarter of Brazilians Are Fully Literate

Only 26% of the Brazilian population in the 15-64 age bracket is fully literate. ...

Reliving Brazil’s World Cup Excitement

In the midst of all the commotion, someone yelled "pentacampeão," which means five-time champion. ...

NYT Reporter Calls Brazilian Air Control Terrible

Joe Sharkey, the New York Times reporter who was in the small jet that ...

Arrested in Brazil Woman Wanted in Death of Lebanon’s Ex-Premier

A fugitive bank executive wanted for questioning in the U.N. probe of the assassination ...