Geopolitics · Global Order
India's G20 Presidency: Voice of the Global South
In 2023, India held the rotating presidency of the G20 — the forum of the world's largest economies — and used it not merely to host summits, but to reposition itself as the spokesman for the developing world.
A platform, seized
India ran the presidency under the theme Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam — 'the world is one family' — and held meetings in dozens of cities, turning a diplomatic calendar into a nationwide showcase.[1]
A statement of arrival: India shaping the global agenda, not just reacting to it.
The Global South's advocate
India framed the agenda around the concerns of developing nations: debt, food and energy security, climate finance, and reform of global institutions — positioning itself as a bridge between rich and poor economies.
Bringing in Africa
The presidency's signature win was the admission of the African Union as a permanent G20 member — a structural change that gave a continent of over a billion people a seat at the table, and burnished India's credentials as a champion of the South.
Consensus against the odds
Amid deep divisions over the war in Ukraine, India brokered a New Delhi Declaration that all members could sign — a diplomatic feat many had thought impossible, and a demonstration of India's convening power.
Why it mattered
The G20 year was a statement of arrival: proof that India could shape global agendas, not just react to them — and a rehearsal for the larger role it seeks, including a permanent Security Council seat.
Sources & further reading
- "2023 G20 New Delhi summit," Wikipedia.
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