G 20 CALLS FOR ONE WORLD GOVERNMENT, ONE WORLD CURRENCY
The G20 moves the world a step closer to a global currency
The world is a step closer to a global currency, backed by a global
central bank, running monetary policy for all humanity.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 3:45PM BST 07 Apr 2009

A single clause in Point 19 of the communiqué issued by the G20
leaders amounts to revolution in the global financial order.

"We have agreed to support a general SDR allocation which will inject
$250bn (£170bn) into the world economy and increase global liquidity,"
it said. SDRs are Special Drawing Rights, a synthetic paper currency
issued by the International Monetary Fund that has lain dormant for
half a century.

It has been a good summit for the IMF. Its fighting fund for crises is
to be tripled overnight to $750bn. This is real money.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director, said in February that
the world was "already in Depression" and risked a slide into social
disorder and military conflict unless political leaders resorted to
massive stimulus.

He has not won everything he wanted. The spending plan was fudged.
While Gordon Brown talked of $5 trillion in global stimulus by 2010,
this is mostly made up of packages already under way.

But Mr Strauss-Kahn at least has resources fit for his own task. He
will need them. The IMF is already bailing out Pakistan, Iceland,
Latvia, Hungary, Ukraine, Belarus, Serbia, Bosnia and Romania. This
week Mexico became the first G20 state to ask for help. It has secured
a precautionary credit line of $47bn.

Gordon Brown said it took 15 years for the world to grasp the nettle
after Great Crash in 1929. "This time I think people will agree that
it has been different," he said.

President Barack Obama was less dramatic. "I think we did OK," he
said. Bretton Woods in 1944 was a simpler affair. "Just Roosevelt and
Churchill sitting in a room with a brandy, that's an easy negotiation,
but that's not the world we live in."

There will be $250bn in trade finance to kick-start shipping after
lenders cut back on Letters of Credit after September's heart attack
in the banking system. Global trade volumes fell at annual rate of
41pc from November to January, according to Holland's CPB institute –
the steepest peacetime fall on record.

Euphoria swept emerging markets yesterday as the first reports of the
IMF boost circulated. Investors now know that countries like Mexico
can arrange a credit facility able to cope with major shocks – and do
so on supportive terms, rather than the hair-shirt deflation policies
of the old IMF. Fear is receding again.

The Russians had hoped their idea to develop SDRs as a full reserve
currency to challenge the dollar would make its way on to the agenda,
but at least they got a foot in the door.

There is now a world currency in waiting. In time, SDRs are likely
evolve into a parking place for the foreign holdings of central banks,
led by the People's Bank of China. Beijing's moves this week to offer
$95bn in yuan currency swaps to developing economies show how fast
China aims to break dollar dependence.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the summit had achieved more
than he ever thought possible, and praised Gordon Brown for pursuing
the collective interest as host rather than defending "Anglo-Saxon"
interests. This has a double-edged ring, for it suggests that Mr Brown
may have traded pockets of the British financial industry to satisfy
Franco-German demands. The creation of a Financial Stability Board
looks like the first step towards a global financial regulator. The
devil is in the details.

Hedge funds deemed "systemically important" will come under draconian
restraints. How this is enforced will determine whether Mayfair's
hedge-fund industry – 80pc of all European funds are there – will
continue to flourish.

It seems that hedge funds have been designated for ritual sacrifice,
even though they played no more than a cameo role in the genesis of
this crisis. It was not they who took on extreme debt leverage: it was
the banks – up to 30 times in the US and nearer 60 times for some in
Europe that used off-books "conduits" to increase their bets. The
market process itself is sorting this out in any case – brutally –
forcing banks to wind down their leverage. The problem right now is
that this is happening too fast.

But to the extent that this G20 accord makes it impossible for the
"shadow banking" to resurrect itself in the next inevitable cycle of
risk appetite, it may prevent another disaster of this kind.

The key phrase is "new rules aimed at avoiding excessive leverage and
forcing banks to put more money aside during good times." This is more
or less what the authorities agreed after the Depression. Complacency
chipped away at the rules as the decades passed. It is the human
condition, and we can't change that. http://www.squidoo.com/tithes-and-offerings

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