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  • G20 Meet for 2 Day Global Economic Crisis Summit Begining Today in Washington

    Nov. 14 (Bloomberg) -- A two-day summit on the global economic crisis begins today in Washington with world leaders likely to agree on little more than trying to spend their way out of a global recession.


    The Group of 20 heads of state are divided on what needs to be done after that. European leaders are demanding greater state controls over financial markets. President George W. Bush, who hosts a dinner of his counterparts at the White House tonight, takes a narrower view.


    Increased government spending on economic stimulus is something most of the industrialized and developing nations that form the G-20 are already planning to do. Any shift toward substantive change to the international financial system will probably wait for another meeting after President-elect Barack Obama takes office.

    ``The most realistic outcome is an agreement to start putting in place principles for reforms, and then agree to meet again,'' said Brad Setser, an economist at the Council on Foreign Relations and former U.S. Treasury official.


    Leaders of the G-20, who represent almost 90 percent of the world economy, are feeling pressure with stock markets tumbling and economists forecasting the deepest global recession in three decades.


    Deteriorating Economies


    Statistics published within the last 24 hours showed deterioration in economies around the world. The 15-nation euro area fell into its first recession in 15 years; the number of Americans collecting jobless benefitsjumped to a 25-year high; and Chinese industrial production gained last month at the slowest pace in seven years. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development predicted the economies in its bloc of 30 rich nations would contract next year by 0.3 percent.



    The U.S. president invited the G-20 leaders to Washington for their first-ever summit in response to calls from French President Nicolas Sarkozy and U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown for a discussion of the causes and possible cures of the financial crisis.


    Bush's European guests want a more international approach to market regulation with curbs on executive pay and hedge funds as well as greater cross-border supervision of banks.


    More Rules


    German Chancellor Angela Merkel today said she'll do ``everything to ensure that there are more rules to prevent us from ever having to face such a situation again.'' Sarkozy says the view that ``everything could be solved by deregulation, free competition and the market'' is now outmoded.


    One possible compromise is adopting Brown's suggestion for a network of international regulators who meet to monitor banks that have significant interests in multiple economies. Merkel said she backs a ``global map'' to assess risks in the financial system and Bush yesterday said the G-20 ``must strengthen cooperation among the world's financial authorities.''
    Bush remains averse to ``too much'' government meddling in markets, even after his administration backed bailouts of American International Group Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. and began implementing a $700 billion rescue program.


    ``History has shown that the greater threat to economic prosperity is not too little government involvement in the market, but too much,'' Bush said in a speech yesterday in New York. ``Our aim should not be more government, it should be smarter government.''


    Common Standards


    The G-20 leaders will also consider pushing common standards for accounting and creating centralized clearing houses for financial instruments such as credit default swaps, Bush said. He added ways will be sought to give developing nations more power within the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.


    Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso will offer up to $100 billion in lending to the IMF at the summit and ask other nations to give further resources too, his office said.


    That may leave foreign leaders to take up a broader regulatory push after Obama's inauguration in January. The president-elect won't attend this week's meeting, sending former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Republican Representative Jim Leach as his emissaries.


    ``This is a process and not an event,'' said Charles Freeman, a foreign policy analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.


    That means results from this round of talks may be limited to agreement on common principles such as a desire to avoid protectionism and a pledge to take more steps to boost expansion. ``There should be no heightened expectations,'' Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said yesterday.


    `Need for Urgency'


    Interest-rate cuts by the world's major central banks have yet to unfreeze credit markets, leaving governments to step in with more spending and lower taxes.


    ``There is a need for urgency,'' Brown told reporters traveling with him to the U.S. yesterday. ``The cost of inaction will be far greater than the cost of any action.''


    China, the world's fourth-largest economy, last week announced a 4 trillion-yuan ($586 billion) stimulus plan, while Germany's Merkel is considering boosting her fiscal stimulus program from the 50 billion-euro ($62.6 billion) package endorsed by her Cabinet last week.


    Brown is signaling he'll cut British taxes soon and Aso promised Oct. 30 to pump 5 trillion yen into his economy after a 1.8 trillion-yen supplementary budget was passed last month.


    Stimulus Measures


    In the U.S., Democratic lawmakers are considering passing two stimulus measures, one during a so-called lame-duck session starting next week and another after Obama and a larger Democratic majority in Congress take office.


    ``Practically everyone agrees on the need for massive fiscal stimulus,'' said Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London. ``Agreement on reform of the global financial architecture will clearly be much harder.''


    G-20 members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the U.S., the U.K. and the European Union. The Netherlands and Spain will also be represented.


    Others invited include International Monetary Fund managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, World Bank President Robert Zoellick and United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
    To contact the reporter on this story: Simon Kennedy in Washington at Skennedy4@bloomberg.net; Michael McKee in New York at mmckee@bloomberg.net
    Last Updated: November 14, 2008 08:37 EST

    Bloomberg delivers business and markets news, data, analysis, and video to the world, featuring stories from Businessweek and Bloomberg News on everything pertaining to politics



  • #2
    Re: G20 Meet for 2 Day Global Economic Crisis Summit Begining Today in Washington

    November 15, 2008, 3:04 pm
    White House Fact Sheet: Agreements of G-20 Summit

    The White House released a fact sheet of the G-20 summit. The full text follows:

    Summit On Financial Markets And The World Economy

    President Bush And World Leaders Agree On The Washington Declaration to Address Current Financial Crisis

    Today, President Bush and world leaders gathered for the first in a series of meetings to discuss efforts to strengthen economic growth, deal with the financial crisis, and to lay the foundation for reform to help to ensure that a similar crisis does not happen again. Since the outbreak of this crisis, the world’s leading nations have coordinated actions more closely than ever before. Thanks in large part to these decisive measures, once frozen global credit markets are beginning to thaw and businesses around the world are gaining access to essential short-term financing. This problem did not develop overnight, and it will not be solved overnight. No single nation will be able to fix this crisis, but with continued cooperation and determination, it will be solved as long as we are steadfast in our commitment to reforming our financial sectors and maintaining free and open markets.

    Today’s Summit achieved five key objectives. The leaders:

    Reached a common understanding of the root causes of the global crisis;
    Reviewed actions countries have taken and will take to address the immediate crisis and strengthen growth;
    Agreed on common principles for reforming our financial markets;
    Launched an action plan to implement those principles and asked ministers to develop further specific recommendations that will be reviewed by leaders at a subsequent summit; and
    Reaffirmed their commitment to free market principles.

    The leaders agreed that immediate steps could be taken or considered to restore growth and support emerging market economies by:
    Continuing to take whatever further actions are necessary to stabilize the financial system;
    Recognizing the importance of monetary policy support and using fiscal measures, as appropriate;
    Providing liquidity to help unfreeze credit markets; and
    Ensuring that the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and other multilateral development banks (MDBs) have sufficient resources to assist developing countries affected by the crisis, as well as provide trade and infrastructure financing.

    The Leaders Agreed On Common Principles To Guide Financial Market Reform:

    Strengthening transparency and accountability by enhancing required disclosure on complex financial products; ensuring complete and accurate disclosure by firms of their financial condition; and aligning incentives to avoid excessive risk-taking.
    Enhancing sound regulation by ensuring strong oversight of credit rating agencies; prudent risk management; and oversight or regulation of all financial markets, products, and participants as appropriate to their circumstances.
    Promoting integrity in financial markets by preventing market manipulation and fraud, helping avoid conflicts of interest, and protecting against use of the financial system to support terrorism, drug trafficking, or other illegal activities.
    Reinforcing international cooperation by making national laws and regulations more consistent and encouraging regulators to enhance their coordination and cooperation across all segments of financial markets.
    Reforming international financial institutions (IFIs) by modernizing their governance and membership so that emerging market economies and developing countries have greater voice and representation, by working together to better identify vulnerabilities and anticipate stresses, and by acting swiftly to play a key role in crisis response.
    Our Nations Will Continue To Take The Right Steps To Get Through This Crisis
    The leaders approved an Action Plan that sets forth a comprehensive work plan to implement these principles, and asked finance ministers to work to ensure that the Action Plan is fully and vigorously implemented. The Plan includes immediate actions to:
    Address weaknesses in accounting and disclosure standards for off-balance sheet vehicles;
    Ensure that credit rating agencies meet the highest standards and avoid conflicts of interest, provide greater disclosure to investors, and differentiate ratings for complex products;
    Ensure that firms maintain adequate capital, and set out strengthened capital requirements for banks’ structured credit and securitization activities;
    Develop enhanced guidance to strengthen banks’ risk management practices, and ensure that firms develop processes that look at whether they are accumulating too much risk;
    Establish processes whereby national supervisors who oversee globally active financial institutions meet together and share information; and
    Expand the Financial Stability Forum to include a broader membership of emerging economies.
    The leaders instructed finance ministers to make specific recommendations in the following areas:
    Avoiding regulatory policies that exacerbate the ups and downs of the business cycle;
    Reviewing and aligning global accounting standards, particularly for complex securities in times of stress;
    Strengthening transparency of credit derivatives markets and reducing their systemic risks;
    Reviewing incentives for risk-taking and innovation reflected in compensation practices; and
    Reviewing the mandates, governance, and resource requirements of the IFIs.

    The leaders agreed that needed reforms will be successful only if they are grounded in a commitment to free market principles, including the rule of law, respect for private property, open trade and investment, competitive markets, and efficient, effectively-regulated financial systems. The leaders further agreed to:
    Reject protectionism, which exacerbates rather than mitigates financial and economic challenges;
    Strive to reach an agreement this year on modalities that leads to an ambitious outcome to the Doha Round of World Trade Organization negotiations;
    Refrain from imposing any new trade or investment barriers for the next 12 months; and
    Reaffirm development assistance commitments and urge both developed and emerging economies to undertake commitments consistent with their capacities and roles in the global economy.


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    • #3
      Re: G20 Meet for 2 Day Global Economic Crisis Summit Begining Today in Washington

      Video of Bush and Obama statements on G20 Meeting -

      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122675491756631041.html?mod=article-outset-box#articleTabs%3Dvideo

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