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G20 rift deepens ahead of crisis-response talks

G20 unity looked seriously compromised after Paris accused Washington of disregarding the urgent need for tough market regulation.

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Japan joined the US push for more government spending to fight the economic crisis on Friday but G20 unity looked seriously compromised after Paris accused Washington of disregarding the urgent need for tough market regulation.

Some progress is being made: financial leaders are expected to back a call this week to double International Monetary Fund resources to help emerging economies hit by a collapse in global demand for their exports and the severing of credit lines.

But the French criticism exposed a deepening rift as finance ministers from the G20 old and emerging economic powers headed to talks south of London to thrash out what can be done to stabilise the banking system and limit the worst global downturn in decades.
“The United States is insisting on the need for a strong, rapid and coordinated stimulus. Why? Because they were the last ones to put in place their plan and they are facing a bigger crisis,” France’s finance minister, Christine Lagarde, said.

“For most of the countries in continental Europe, the urgency is to develop the rules, highlight discipline and sanctions through a new architecture of the financial system,” she said.

Japanese finance minister Kaoru Yosano, though, urged world leaders to focus on giving the global economy an immediate boost and pledging to unveil new economic stimulus measures by April.

China too said it was ready to do more if needed to spur its growth.

“The immediate issues are to stabilise the financial system (and) to get out of the present deflation threat facing the world economy,” Japan’s Yosano was quoted as saying in Friday’s edition of The Financial Times.

“These two are the most important things.”The G20 group’s finance ministers and central bankers are meeting in Horsham, south of London to pave the way for a meeting of world leaders on the crisis on April 2, also being hosted by Britain.

The G20 are under pressure to deliver on pledges made in November to combat the crisis and guard against future meltdowns, including commitments to regulate better.
But the run-up to this week’s gathering has been dominated by disagreements over what the summit’s priorities should be.

Washington is urging the biggest industrialised countries to spend 2% of their gross domestic product to boost demand and pull the global economy out of its tailspin, but France and Germany have rejected US and British calls for fresh spending.

“The international community must unite to tackle the downturn and set the path toward a sustainable future,” British finance minister Alistair Darling said.

“We must do three things: boost demand, reform the global system of financial regulation, and increase the resources of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).”
The G20 represents more than 80% of the global economy, comprising the G7 long-industrialised nations — all of which are in or near recession — and key emerging market economies such as China, India, Russia and Brazil.

Early in the crisis, major central banks made coordinated rate cuts to spur demand but policy actions have been largely ad hoc since. French President Nicolas Sarkozy rebuffed US calls to spend more at a news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Thursday.

“We consider that in Europe we have already invested a lot for the recovery, and that the problem is not about spending more, but putting in place a system of regulation so that the economic and financial catastrophe that the world is seeing does not reproduce itself,” Sarkozy said. Reuters

Russia will also oppose British proposals for G20 members to set a mandatory minimum fiscal stimulus level at 2% of GDP and cut interest rates, a Russian delegation source said.
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