In recent years, the BRICS bloc comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa has emerged as a vital platform for South-South cooperation, shaping global governance and development agendas. This study examines the impact of BRICS collaboration on social development initiatives in South Africa, focusing on the nature, achievements, and challenges of BRICS-supported projects. Grounded in the Developmental State Theory, the research explores how these partnerships align with national development goals and contribute to social transformation. Using a qualitative, exploratory design, data were collected through semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders, including South African scholars specializing in BRICS relations and officials from the Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO), selected through purposive and snowball sampling. Findings indicate that BRICS collaboration has contributed significantly to infrastructure, education, and healthcare development, particularly through the New Development Bank (NDB) and knowledge-sharing initiatives. Successes include enhanced funding mechanisms and technology transfer, mainly from China and India. However, challenges such as bureaucratic inefficiencies, weak coordination among BRICS partners, and socio-political resistance persist. While BRICS initiatives align with South Africa’s National Development Plan (NDP) 2030, gaps remain in addressing unemployment, poverty, and inequality. The study recommends improving policy coordination, transparency in funding, and stronger public-private partnerships to integrate BRICS initiatives into local social frameworks. Overall, the findings suggest that with targeted reforms and deeper collaboration, BRICS can play a transformative role in advancing South Africa’s social development agenda and achieving long-term sustainability. Limitations include a small sample size.
Ngcobo et al. (Wed,) studied this question.