Summit pledge to 'restore growth'
  [image: George Bush] Summit leaders have pledged to co-operate to restore
economic growth

*Global leaders at the G20 financial summit in Washington have pledged to
work together to restore global growth.*

They said they were determined to work together to achieve "needed reforms"
in the world's financial systems.

"We are adapting our financial systems to the realities of the 21st
century," said US President George Bush in his address at the end of the
summit.

Mr Bush said that finance minsters would now work on detailed reform
proposals and then report back.

The meeting brought together leading industrial powers, such as the US,
Japan and Germany, and emerging market countries such as China, India and
Brazil - representing 85% of the world economy.

Key issues agreed by world leaders at this summit included:

   - reform of international financial institutions such as the World Bank
   and the International Monetary Fund
   - an agreement by the end of 2008, leading to a successful global
   free-trade deal
   - improvements to financial market transparency and ensuring complete and
   accurate disclosure by firms of their financial conditions
   - making sure banks and financial institutions' incentives should
   "prevent excessive risk taking"
   - asking finance ministers to draw-up a list of financial institutions
   whose collapse would endanger the global economic system
   - strengthening countries' financial regulatory regimes
   - taking a "fresh look" at rules that govern market manipulation and
   fraud.

At their meeting in Washington, leaders pledged to "lay the foundation for
reform to help to ensure that a global crisis, such as this one, does not
happen again".

 HAVE YOUR SAY <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/talking_point/default.stm>

Everyone is affected by this downfall. Budgets of households and big
corporations are equally affected

Asif Chaudhry, Pakistan
 *Send us your 
comments*<http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/nol/thread.jspa?forumID=5661&edition=1&ttl=20081115094203>

Mr Bush said there was no doubt that the financial crisis facing the United
States and many other countries was a severe one.

He said it had even been conceivable that the US "could go into a depression
greater than the Great Depression".

But in their closing statement, leaders said the reforms would only be
successful, if they were "grounded in a commitment to free market
principles".

G20 leaders say they will meet again by 30 April, 2009, to review progress.
The G20 group of countries consists of 19 leading industrialised and
developing countries, as well as the European Union.

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