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G20 signs pact to avert trade war, seals IMF power shift

IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn called the agreement historic.

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The Group of 20 major economies agreed on Saturday to shun competitive currency devaluations but stopped short of setting targets to reduce trade imbalances that are clouding global growth prospects.

At a meeting in South Korea, G20 finance ministers recognised the quickening shift in economic power away from Western industrial nations by striking a surprise deal to give emerging nations a bigger voice in the International Monetary Fund.

A closing communique contained no major policy initiative after a US proposal to limit current account imbalances to 4% of gross domestic product, a measure aimed squarely at shrinking China's surplus, failed to win broad enough backing.

Indeed, the United States itself came under fire from Germany and China for the super-loose monetary policy stance it has adopted to try to breathe life into the sluggish US economy.

German economy minister Rainer Bruederle said he had made clear that easing was the wrong way to go.

"An excessive, permanent increase in money is, in my view, an indirect manipulation of the (foreign exchange) rate," he said.

The main aim of the two days of talks, which precede a G20 summit in Seoul on November 11-12, was to ease currency strains that some economists feared could escalate into trade wars.

Developing countries are worried that Washington, by flooding the US banking system with cash, is pumping up their asset prices and exchange rates, thus undermining the competitiveness of the export industries on which they rely for growth.

China, among others, frets that the US policy stance will debase the dollar, the lynchpin of the global economy.

In a thinly veiled reference to the United States, the G20 statement said advanced countries, including those with reserve currencies, would be vigilant against excessive volatility and disorderly movements in exchange rates.

Washington, by contrast, is frustrated over the refusal of China in particular to let its currency rise to a level that reflects its growing economic power and would help reduce its big trade surplus with the United States.

"If the world is going to be able to grow at a strong, sustainable pace in the future... then we need to work to achieve more balance in the pattern of global growth as we recover from the crisis," US treasury secretary Timothy Geithner said.

US officials were pleased that the communique committed G20 members to "refrain from competitive devaluations" of their currencies and to pursue a full range of policies to reduce excessive external imbalances.

Geithner will keep up the pressure on Monday for a stronger yuan when he holds talks in China with vice-premier Wang Qishan, who has broad responsibility for economic policy.

"The content of the G20 statement is generic and broadly in line with expectations, but this should not detract from the fact important progress was made in giving emerging market countries a greater voice in the IMF," said Claudio Piron, a currency strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Singapore.

Despite the sniping from Germany and China, whose finance minister demanded responsible policies from issuers of major reserve currencies -- code for the United States -- host South Korea put an optimistic spin on the outcome of the meetings.

"This will put an end to the controversy over foreign exchange rates," said finance minister Yoon Jeung-hyun.

South Korea was also able to point to the deal to shift more than 6% of the IMF's quotas -- membership subscriptions that help determine voting power -- to emerging economies whose clout in the Fund has not kept pace with their economic ascent.

Europe will give up two seats on the fund's 24-strong Executive Board.

IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn called the agreement historic. "This makes for the biggest reform ever in the governance of the institution," he said.

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