(On the far left of the team, Sarkozy sez: "I believe a forum to decide
on big changes in the international economy can be held in the next few
months" - with the G8 coopting China, India, Brazil and South Africa, in
coming weeks... in New York, hah. Surely that's a place to revitalise
the spirit of Seattle, if the bastards think they're doing a new Bretton
Woods with just 12 out of 192 countries?)

Globe and Mail Report on Business October 16, 2008

GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS

European powers urge global overhaul

"A new form of capitalism is needed, based on values which put finance
at the service of business and citizens, and not vice versa.”
– French President Nicolas Sarkozy

Francois Murphy and Darren Ennis

Brussels -- France, Britain and Germany led calls yesterday for an
overhaul of the world's financial system aimed at preventing a repeat of
the worst credit crisis since the Great Depression while markets slumped
again.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy told an EU summit that a "new form of
capitalism" was needed, as European fears grew that the U.S. subprime
debacle could plunge the global economy into recession despite
unprecedented rescues of banking giants.

His proposal for talks on reforms to financial architecture won
acceptance from the United States, Japan and Russia, which put their
name to a Group of Eight statement saying a meeting could be held "at an
appropriate time in the near future."

Concern about a deepening slowdown wiped away optimism earlier this week
that the worst of the crisis was over, with global stock prices falling
sharply once again on recession fears and investors scurrying into safe
havens such as gold.

"We are not at the end of the crisis. We are still living in dangerous
times," Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of 15
euro zone finance ministers said on arrival.

The 27 EU leaders broadly endorsed a concerted €2.2-trillion
($3.5-trillion) rescue plan for banks agreed on Sunday by the 15
countries that share the euro single currency, Spanish Finance Minister
Pedro Solbes said.

Mr. Sarkozy said the credit crunch was "one crisis too many" after the
bubble of enthusiasm about a new Internet-driven economy burst in 2001.

"The system must be completely overhauled, an overhaul that must be
global," Mr. Sarkozy told other EU leaders, repeating his call for an
international summit before the end of the year, "preferably in New York
where everything began."

"A new form of capitalism is needed, based on values which put finance
at the service of business and citizens, and not vice versa," he said,
according to a copy of his speech.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown joined his call for a summit and
urged a rebuilding of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as the
keystone of global market regulation.

"I believe a forum to decide on big changes in the international economy
can be held in the next few months," he told a news conference, adding
he expected the Group of Eight top economies and key emerging nations
such as China, India, Brazil and South Africa to gather in November or
December.

Germany also backed the idea, which Mr. Sarkozy has pushed as the
fastest way of revamping international financial structures set up over
60 years ago at the 1944 Bretton Woods conference.

"While our focus now is on the immediate task of stabilizing markets and
restoring confidence, changes to the regulatory and institutional
regimes for the world's financial sectors are needed to remedy
deficiencies exposed by the current crisis," G8 leaders said in a
statement released by the White House.

The G8 includes the United States, Japan, Canada, Russia, Great Britain,
France, Germany and Italy.

Mr. Sarkozy also said a clampdown was needed on speculative hedge funds
and the offshore financial centres that he called "grey zones." Britain,
with links to such centres, has in the past blocked attempts in the EU
to target their activities.

Mr. Brown insisted that global problems required global solutions, and
said the key role in supervision should go to the International Monetary
Fund and the Financial Stability Forum (FSF), which have no binding
powers of enforcement. Poland's Finance Minister said the European
Commission circulated a paper at the summit calling for a pan-European
supervisory body.

Reuters



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