Opinion | Why New Zealand joining Brics makes sense in Trump’s ‘America-first’ era
Brics is a maturing economic and diplomatic powerhouse. Joining could help New Zealand spread its diplomatic wings and secure its future

As long-term economic and diplomatic power shifts towards Asia and the wider Indo-Pacific, alternative multilateral groups are now growing in importance.
Joining Brics would not mean New Zealand needs to leave other multilateral institutions
The core strategic logic of Brics is based on consensus and solidarity, not coercion, and to gain member benefits via collective strength. “We share the vision of inclusive growth and prosperity in the world,” as then Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh put it in 2009. “We stand for a rule-based, stable and predictable global order.”
Having substantial economies, populations, landmasses and ambitions underpinned this shared goal of a multipolar world, which now seems to be emerging by a different route due to Trump’s isolationist “America first” policies.
