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Moscow (AFP) - Russian President
Vladimir Putin ratified an accord Saturday to set up a $100-billion
reserve fund for the so-called BRICS -- the five leading emerging
economies that include Russia, China, Brazil, India and South Africa.
Moscow
is expected to contribute $18 billion to the reserve, well behind the
$41 billion China has promised to pour into the fund that was set up
after an agreement signed in July 2014 in Brazil.
The
emerging economies also plan to form their own international bank based
in Shanghai to challenge western dominance over international money
markets.
"The accord on the
creation of a common reserve fund for BRICS countries has been
ratified," a document from the Kremlin quoted by RIA Novosti news agency
said.
The fund is meant to
shield the BRICS against "short-term liquidity pressures" and promote
greater cooperation between the five member countries.
Russia
-- which has suffered huge currency fluctuations since the outbreak of
the crisis in Ukraine -- sees the fund as an alternative to
international financial institutions like the IMF and World Bank that
are dominated by the United States.
The BRICS countries between them account for 40 percent of the world's population, and a fifth of the planet's GDP.
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