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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

G20: battle for influence as US seeks to rival China in the global south

Police personnel patrol along a street in front of India's presidential palace before the G20 India summit.
Police patrol a street in front of India's presidential palace before the G20 summit. Photograph: Tauseef Mustafa/AFP/Getty Images

The run-up to this weekend’s G20 summit in Delhi has largely been dominated by two issues: the host’s efforts to project India as a superpower; and the intriguing decision of Xi Jinping not to attend. The substance of what world leaders will discuss during their two days together has struggled to surface.

Yet this year’s G20 – the 24th since the format was inaugurated in 1999 – is potentially a make or break moment for the organisation that includes the world’s 19 wealthiest nations plus the European Union as a bloc. With one part of the world increasingly gathering in the now expanded Brics format where China has a leading role, and the west comfortable with its annual G7 summitry, the G20 is the best remaining hope of keeping the principle of multilateralism alive. The United Nations secretary general, António Guterres, spoke on Thursday of a real risk of fragmentation of the world order, while his own organisation is paralysed by the war in Ukraine.

Such are the divisions about that conflict there is “a strong risk” that there will be no G20 joint communique, according to Tristen Naylor, assistant professor of international relations at the University of Cambridge. “It is more possible than ever before there will be no joint communique,” he said. Both China and Russia have refused to allow Ukraine to be discussed. One suggested idea is that the G20 just repeat what was agreed at the last G20 in Bali, but Russia says western intervention has been so intense since then that the Bali baseline cannot hold.

The absence of a joint statement would be a huge disappointment to India, Naylor says, since it has set such store by being the country that is able to act as the broker on behalf the global south. Dr Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, India’s external affairs minister, said the G20 should never be seen as an “arena for power politics, but instead of collaboration” and claims that no previous G20 host has consulted as widely with the developing world as India on what it wants discussed. He said the views of 125 countries had been sought. As a symbol of this inclusiveness, India will be able to announce the African Union has given a permanent seat at the G20 top table.

The US, looking for any advantage in the ceaseless geopolitical competition with China for influence in the global south, is determined to exploit Xi’s late withdrawal.

Jake Sullivan, the US national security adviser, has said that if Xi wanted tospoil Narendra Modi’s big moment that was up to him, adding China appeared to be spurning a chance to engage constructively and solve the multilateral problems facing developing countries.

The US is also contrasting China’s ecomomic slowdown with the relative turnaround in the American economy. Sullivan has promised the US will come to the summit with a “value proposition” on debt relief, technology, bank reform and action on the climate crisis.

The package includes a sovereign debt restructuring for low- and middle-income countries that Sullivan says could ultimately leverage more than $200bn (£160bn), starting with an initial Congress-endorsed $25bn.

Sullivan has also embraced a better funded World Bank under the new leadership of Ajay Banga as “a positive, affirmative alternative lending method to what is a much more opaque, more coercive method, which is the Chinese Belt and Road initiative method”.

In practice many of the ideas on multilateral bank reform stem from a mammoth Indian-commissioned report prepared by Harvard professor Larry Summers and NK Singh, the president of the Indian Institute for Growth. Unlike the US, China has been cautious about the report’s recommendation that the international development finance system could provide $500bn in additional external financing by 2030.

The dispute on the climate crisis, according to India, focuses on phasing out fossil fuels and the date by which renewable energy capacity could be tripled. China is leading a group including Russia and Saudi Arabia opposing the tripling of renewable capacity by 2030 and a cut in greenhouse gas emissions of 60% by 2035. It is likely the G20 will also expand the use of climate transition finance to cover the adaptation of the production of materials like cement and steel.

There will also be pressure on the rich countries to fulfil a commitment made three years ago to provide $100bn in climate finance annually to low- and middle-income countries.

India’s negotiating hand at the G20 is, however, limited in two respects. First, its energy minister, RK Singh, has often said Indian emissions per head are some of the lowest in the world and he has no plans to phase out coal use. Secondly, the UN’s Cop28 climate conference, starting at the end of November in Dubai, provides a ready reason for all sides to agree to defer difficult issues.

Joe Biden will, meanwhile, do all he can to praise Modi on his chosen themes such as digital transformation, since India is regarded as the critical ally in Washington’s conflict with the absent Xi.

No one can be sure why the Chinese president will not be there. Evan Feigenbaum at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said his absence was odd given countries favourable to China such as Saudi Arabia would have been present. He said: “Either he is preoccupied domestically about changing China’s economic model or trying to signal that he can opt in and out of these groups.”

If it is the latter, India’s chosen summit slogan – “one Earth, one family, one future” – looks somewhat threadbare.

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