World leaders will meet at the G-20 Summit with time running out to prevent the recession worsening
The G-20 Summit in Pittsburgh, which will begin today and end on Friday, opens up an opportunity for world leaders to find a way out of the current financial mess. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva is also participating in this summit, as chair of the Association of Southeast Asia Nations.
Five months ago, the world was reeling under unprecedented financial turmoil. Many were predicting that an economic depression was on the horizon, after decades of global imbalances and financial bubbles. A concerted action by the G-20 helped stave off the crisis, with some US$12 trillion having been poured into the global economy and financial system to prevent a systemic collapse.
High on the agenda of the G-20 - the member countries of which control about 85 per cent of the world's gross domestic product - is a joint economic programme to arrest the recession, coordination efforts on financial policy to prevent another crisis, how to curb bank executives' pay to prevent them from taking excessive risks, and an exit strategy from the government intervention into the economies.
There are dilemmas facing the G-20 leaders. The fiscal stimulus programmes may prevent economies from weakening any further, but they have created enormous burdens on public-sector debt. The loose monetary policy to assist banks and corporations in resuming their business might ignite fears of inflation. When is the appropriate time for the G-20 to exit from its heavy-handed involvement in the global economy and global financial system so that the private sector can take charge again?
There are signs that the global recession is fading. But most G-20 leaders, and the International Monetary Fund, are not rushing to bet on that. Gordon Brown, the UK prime minister, said it is premature to conclude that the recession is over, and it is still necessary for the UK to continue its fiscal stimulus programme. US President Barack Obama said unemployment in the US will continue to worsen over the next couple of months. Canada is pledging a fiscal stimulus package equivalent to about 4 per cent of its gross domestic product, just to keep the economy humming. It has called for the G-20 to continue the fiscal programmes to help lift the world out of the recession.
Most interesting will be how China plays its cards at the summit. China would like to have a greater say in the International Monetary Fund. It has said it is willing to subscribe to the tune of $50 billion in the IMF's $500 billion recapitalisation programme, to increase its lending capacity to needy countries facing balance of payments crises. The US and the European Union, however, are still cautious over China's attempt to exert its newfound influence in the international financial institutions.
Moreover, China also wants to reform the IMF away from its current make-up, which has been around since the end of World War II. Along with Brazil, India and Russia, China has called for the international monetary system to steer away from the US dollar as the predominant reserve currency. China is relying on a two-track strategy on this front. It would like the role of the Special Drawing Rights - a currency unit of the IMF - to play a greater role in global financial transactions. At the same time, it is boosting the role of its renminbi, gradually taking steps to liberalise its financial system to allow greater convertibility of the currency.
These are the big issues that the G-20 leaders will have to address to prevent this recession from deepening and the financial turmoil from getting any further out of control. If the global economy is to face a double dip, it will be difficult for them to pull it out of trouble a second time, given the massive resources they have already poured in to support it.
Moreover, if the G-20 leaders do not have the courage to rein in control over the financial services, which have gone out of control, financial turmoil will return to haunt us all again.
Friday, September 25, 2009
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