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Conceding U.S. Lapses, Obama Resists New Bank Rules

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The language and tone of the leaders says something about what is likely to be the outcome of the G20 summit. Its a first for significant participation, as countries as diverse as Russia, China, India, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, and the Netherlands are represented. The credible positions of both sides, the US, UK and Japan, and the European side of France, Germany and the Czech Republic, well presented, provide for some serious discussion and negotiations. France's Sarkozy and Germany's Merkel want to see a global regulator that would reach inside the borders of the US with stricter regulation. Sarkozy calls this "nonnegotiable." And he said that he would reject an agreement that puts off stringent new regulations on banks, tax havens, and hedge funds. He said "the compromise has to come from all countries around the world." US President Obama said that if there is going to be renewed growth it can't just be the US as the engine, everybody is going to have to pick up the pace," at the same time saying that the US had to be concerned about its own deficits. The fact is that the US stimulus will mostly help a severely impacted domestic economy recover with social safey net payments to local and state governments and unemployment insurance, as well as targeted investments in infrastructure, education, energy and health care. It will not mean anywhere near the kinds of imports the US made from other countries, especially China. And Obama made that clear when he said the US will never return to that situation, where the US had become a "voracious consumer market." For the Germans the major market for their middle companies is China, and China has its own stimulus spending on infrastructure spending, which should provide for continued imports of machinery from Germany at a much lower level. Thus Germany and France see a strong tendency to call the source of the crisis and repeat that call till the US listens, and refer to the failure of free market capitalism in its unregulated form. And to insist on fixing it through a global regulator with strict and systemwide rules. So you hear this in Merkel's words, "the foundation for this finacial architecture must be laid now, that is why we seem to be so tough." While the vivacious Sarkozy talks of compromise, and a US gesture in regulation in return for Franc's gesture of joining NATO, the mild mannered Merkel is clear and focussed about her concern. She rejects the idea of linking stimulus spending demands of the Anglo-Americans with the Franco-German demands for global systemwide regulation. "This is not a bargaining chip," she says. The media may mistakenly report lack of consensus as a failure of the summit. But in the long run in the presence of good positions on both sides, it could lead to some tough negotiations even if continued at another meeting. And result in something serious, credible and lasting in its impact, rather than something that was easy and did not in Andy Grove's useful words involve "constructive confrontation."

The G-20 London Docklands Summit in April 2009- a model of global cooperation for future crises stemming from the global financial crisis of 2008

04/03/2009

The Docklands Summit must rank as one of the largest global cooperation efforts in a global economy hit by a severe crisis, with output drops of over 25% in a a short time. It made ahuge difference in tackling this crisis, and yet its significance is not fully grasped as the crisis fades by 2014.

Grouped Articles

On a Scale of 1-10, G-20 Scores a 7

New York Times 04/03/2009

The Economic Summit

New York Times 04/03/2009

Conceding U.S. Lapses, Obama Resists New Bank Rules

New York Times 04/03/2009

Steven Pearlstein - A Rare Triumph of Substance at the Summit

Washington Post 04/03/2009

Larger Than Life in London

New York Times 04/05/2009

The Lines a German Won’t Cross

New York Times 04/05/2009

The Docklands G-20 London Summit- a high point in the premiership of Gordon Brown of Britain and presidency of Sarkozy in France

04/03/2009

As the first summit in which the G-8 became the G-20, with the participation of emerging market countries India, Indonesia, S. Korea, Turkey, Argentina, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, making this a truly global summit. It also meant less developed countries and their concerns would be given priority in the international forum. In this sense Docklands provided a model for truly remarkable international collaboration and cooperation.

Grouped Articles

Steven Pearlstein - A Rare Triumph of Substance at the Summit

Washington Post 04/03/2009

Conceding U.S. Lapses, Obama Resists New Bank Rules

New York Times 04/03/2009

As G-20 Host, Brown Gets ‘Excellent’ Marks

New York Times 04/03/2009

Larger Than Life in London

New York Times 04/05/2009

The Lines a German Won’t Cross

New York Times 04/05/2009

Opinion: G20 — go back to the roots | DW | 30.11.2018

DW.COM 11/30/2018


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