PM says businesses need to think beyond the bottom line

India holds an important role in setting up an efficient and trusted global supply chain

With the emergence of newer challenges, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday said that businesses need to think beyond the bottom line and this can be done through focusing on supply chain resiliency and sustainability.

“B20 should think on new issues. Businesses have successfully gone beyond borders and boundaries. Now it is time to take businesses just beyond the bottom line. This can only be done by focusing on supply chain resilient and sustainability,” he said at the valedictory session of the B20 or Business 20 Summit India 2023, organised by CII which is the B20 Secretariat.

“Connected work is not just about connecting technologically…it is also about our shared purpose, shared planet, shared prosperity and shared future,” he underlined.

Noting that a number of global business leaders are attending the B20 Summit, the Prime Minister said that there is a need for cooperation on a number of issues such as climate change, energy sector crisis, water crisis, food supply chain imbalance, cyber security that have a big impact on businesses. Further, newer issues such as cryptocurrency and Artificial Intelligence require an integrated approach by businesses and governments across the world.

He called for an integrated approach to the challenge of cryptocurrency, where a global framework is needed and where all stakeholders are kept in mind. A similar approach needs to be followed for AI, he said highlighting ethical considerations regarding skilling and re-skilling, and concerns regarding algorithm bias and its impact on society and global business communities and governments have to ensure that ethical AI expands, he said.

“This is not the first time such challenges have come up. When aviation and financial sector were expanding, then also the world has found such frameworks. So I request the B20 to look at new issues,” the Prime Minister said.

He also highlighted that the future of global growth is dependent on the future of business. We all know business can transform potential into prosperity, obstacles into opportunities, and aspirations into achievements. Whether they are small or big, global or big, business can ensure progress for everyone. Therefore, the future of global growth is dependent on the future of global business,” he said.

Highlighting opportunities presented by India, he said India has become the face of a digital revolution in the era of Industry 4.0. With the pandemic bringing irreversible changes in the global supply chain, he further noted that India holds an important role in setting up an efficient and trusted global supply chain.

 

Source: https://www.businesstoday.in/latest/economy/story/pm-says-businesses-need-to-think-beyond-the-bottom-line-395816-2023-08-27

Economist Lord Jim O’Neill Calls BRICS Currency Idea ‘Ridiculous’ — Says China and India Never Agree on Anything

Lord Jim O’Neill, the British economist credited with coining the acronym BRIC, calls the creation of a common BRICS currency “ridiculous,” emphasizing that the BRICS nations have “never achieved anything since they first started meeting.” He added: “It’s a good job for the West that China and India never agree on anything, because if they did the dominance of the dollar would be a lot more vulnerable.”

Lord Jim O’Neill Slams Common BRICS Currency Idea

British economist Lord Jim O’Neill shared his view on the proposed single BRICS currency in an interview with the Financial Times this week. The BRICS leaders are set to meet at the economic bloc’s 15th summit on Aug. 22-24 in Johannesburg. South Africa is the host of the BRICS summit this year. However, there are mixed reports on whether the creation of a common BRICS currency will be discussed at the summit.

O’Neill, a former Goldman Sachs economist, coined the acronym BRIC over 20 years ago to describe the economic potential of Brazil, Russia, India, and China. South Africa joined the group a few years later, and the acronym was changed to BRICS. O’Neill is now a senior adviser at U.K. think tank Chatham House.

The economist asserted that the BRICS nations had “never achieved anything since they first started meeting” eight years after he created the phrase in a 2001 research note. He believes that a common currency for the BRICS economic bloc would be unfeasible, stating:

It’s just ridiculous … They’re going to create a BRICS central bank? How would you do that? It’s embarrassing, almost.

“Quite what they attempt to achieve beyond powerful symbolism, I don’t know,” he opined.

In June, Lord O’Neill similarly described the idea of a single currency for the BRICS nations as “ridiculous” and “amusing.” He stressed that “China and India never agree on anything,” pointing out that the two countries “can’t even really agree on basic things like a peaceful border.”

U.S. Dollar Could Lose Its Dominance, Lord O’Neill Warns

The British economist also commented on the dominance of the U.S. dollar, emphasizing that the USD’s dominant position in the global financial system is not beneficial for emerging countries. He described:

The dollar’s role is not ideal for the way the world has evolved. You’ve got all these economies who live on this cyclical never-ending twist of whatever the [U.S. Federal Reserve] decides to do in the interests of the U.S.

Some economists have predicted that other currencies, such as the Chinese yuan, the Japanese yen, or the euro, would eventually overtake the U.S. dollar. However, O’Neill cautioned: “None of these things will ever happen until those countries want to have their currencies used by people in other parts of the world.”

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