G-8 nations get ready for economic recovery
G-8 finance officials ask IMF to look at exit strategies, acknowledge signs of 
recovery
Colleen Barry and Jane Wardell, AP Business Writers
On Saturday June 13, 2009, 10:05 am EDT

LECCE, Italy (AP) -- The Group of Eight industrialized nations have begun 
preparing for an economic recovery, acknowledging on Saturday "signs of 
stabilization in our economies" and agreeing to ask the International Monetary 
Fund to study ways to unwind hefty stimulus packages.

In a communique released at the end of a two-day meeting here, the group's 
finance officials said that although the global economy is still weak, 
so-called exit strategies from monetary and fiscal stimulus measures -- like 
tax cuts and lower interest rates -- were "essential to promote a sustainable 
recovery over the long term."

The ministers said they had asked the IMF to analyze potential strategies to 
assist with the process.

However, ministers from the U.S., Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Italy, 
Canada, Russia and the European Union added that the "situation remains 
uncertain and significant risks remain to economic and financial stability" and 
stressed their commitment to provide any more stimulus the economy might need.

"These early signs of improvement are encouraging, but the global economy is 
still operating well below potential and we still face acute challenges," U.S. 
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said after the meeting.

The talks here were designed to set an agenda for a meeting of G-8 heads of 
state next month in L'Aquila in central Italy.

Financial markets have rallied over the past three months on 
better-than-expected economic data, but there are worries in the U.S. and 
Britain that continental Europe has not done enough to deal with the recession. 
And the World Bank forecast on Thursday the global economy will contract 3.0 
percent this year, far worse than a previous estimate of minus 1.75 percent.

British Treasury chief Alistair Darling downplayed the urgency of exit 
strategies in the current economic climate, noting that some countries are only 
just beginning the process of sorting out problems in the banking sector.

"One thing we are absolutely clear about is we are not there yet," Darling told 
reporters. "No-one's talking about exiting now, this is some way down the 
track. We've still got to work this through."

Germany has been a particularly strong critic of the lower interest rates, tax 
cuts and measures to boost the money supply that have been employed by 
countries including Britain and the United States, warning they are potentially 
inflationary and deficit-building.

Geithner said that measures to repair the credit markets and the financial 
system "are designed to be temporary and quickly reversible."

Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti said that exit strategies were 
fundamental to creating a climate of trust and there was a general consensus 
that they were needed, but he added that designing a program would require 
compromises among the G-8 bloc.

"We won't all find agreement but we will need to have political compromises," 
Tremonti said.

The communique also spelled out the need for a set of common principles and 
standards for propriety, integrity and transparency in international business 
and finance.

They agreed on the objectives of a strategy, dubbed the Lecce Framework, to 
identify and fill regulatory gaps and foster the international consensus needed 
to rapidly implement new rules.

Geithner said that proposals on regulatory reform due to be outlined in the 
United States next week would include several international measures. The U.S. 
will call on foreign banking regulators to develop proposals by the end of this 
year to find ways to quickly resolve failures of cross-border financial firms, 
he said.

As the ministers met in a medieval castle in Lecce, about a thousand 
anti-globalization protesters marched peacefully through the historic center of 
the southern Italian town in protest of the meeting, shouting slogans including 
"G-8, economy, lies," and carrying banners urging debt cancellation.

There was no mention in the communique of public stress tests on major banks -- 
Geithner had said earlier this week that he would explain the rigorous public 
stress tests conducted on 19 of America's biggest banks to his counterparts.

Britain has conducted the tests, but released less detail on the results than 
the United States, while Germany has argued they could undermine the fledgling 
economic confidence.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/G8-nations-get-ready-for-apf-15518035.html?sec=topStories&pos=main&asset=&ccode=


Kirim email ke