Brian Wong and Kevin Zongzhe Li
The BRICS countries (henceforth BRICS+) have received growing attention and visibility in international discourses over recent years – in part due to intensifying geopolitical fissures between select members of the grouping and the proverbial “West,” and in part because of a series of expansions that resulted in the bloc doubling in size.
After the 17th BRICS Summit in Brazil in July 2025, BRICS+ expanded to ten full members: the original Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, and the newly incorporated Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Indonesia, and Nigeria. With 10 further countries as partners, the grouping appears to have been transformed from a loose acronym into something closer to a political brand, though the substance and value of what it apparently offers remains to be seen.
With major energy exporters such as UAE and Iran now inside the tent, alongside emerging economies like Egypt and Indonesia, BRICS+ has achieved a scale that commands attention. The recent signs of a tentative thaw between India and China only add to the bloc’s diplomatic weight, which now represents 56 percent of the world’s population and 44 percent of global GDP.
When Western leaders and policymakers dismiss BRICS+ as little more than a geopolitical vanity project of China and Russia, they risk repeating the error many analysts tend to make: writing off the rhetoric as mere bluster and overlooking the substance beneath it. The correct approach is to take BRICS+ seriously, albeit not literally.
The temptation is to laugh off BRICS+ communiques about de-dollarization or the birth of a “multipolar world order.” The gap between rhetoric and reality is indeed vast, but that does not make the grouping irrelevant. If anything, the danger is the opposite: that Western governments, lulled by a mixture of skepticism and comfortable hubris, miscalculate and are caught off guard when experiments begun in the name of symbolism yield practical innovations.
Three Emerging Clusters
As it stands, the bloc has demonstrated growing interest and influence in three areas.