pinter-pinterlah membaca perkembangan zaman dan kemana era dominasi ekonomi dan 
politik akan berhembus...
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The G20 and global economic challenges

On the opening day of the Los Cabos G20 summit, leading Mexican daily El 
Universal has published an article by President Vladimir Putin on world 
economic problems.

An unprecedented crisis hit the global economy four years ago, sending visible 
ripples around the entire world and affecting every country to some degree.

To meet a challenge of this scale the world's leading countries had to 
radically change their approach. For the first time in history, the leaders of 
the countries that account for almost 90 percent of global GDP showed genuine 
desire and ability to coordinate economic policy. Most importantly, they 
prevented the world from taking the dead-end road of trade wars and all-out 
protectionism, and began putting the international currency and financial 
system in order.

Thus, the G20, which before 2008 existed only through the format of regular 
meetings of finance ministers, gained the status of a leading global forum for 
addressing economic and financial issues.

It was thanks to the G20 that measures were taken at the height of the crisis 
to increase the capital of all of the multilateral development banks and 
bolster the IMF's resource base, thus enabling these institutions to support 
the countries worst affected by the crisis. The G20 proposed a long-term agenda 
for reforming the financial regulation system and outlined principles for 
protecting the rights of consumers of financial services. The G20 leaders' 
decision in 2009 to establish the Financial Stability Board as the coordinating 
body for drafting new rules of the game in the financial sector was without 
question a significant event.

But the systemic problems are still far from all solved. The effects of the 
2008 crisis are still visible today. The imbalances that have built up are 
evident in budget shortfalls, troubled banks, and a debt-to-GDP ratio in 
developed countries that has clearly gone beyond reasonable limits. Moreover, 
recent months have brought us negative trends on the markets and other worrying 
signals that now have the analysts making very pessimistic forecasts.

These developments are unfolding against a backdrop of change throughout the 
entire global country. The experts predict that growth in developing markets 
will outstrip growth in the established developed countries more than 3.5-fold 
right up until 2017, and more than 2-fold over the 15 years to follow. Not only 
are the powerhouses of global growth shifting in location, but the geography of 
goods and financial flows is changing too.

What position does Russia take in this situation? Over recent years, Russia, 
which is the world's sixth-biggest economy in terms of purchasing parity power, 
has strengthened its financial and budget system. We have the third-biggest 
currency and gold reserves in the world. With a growth rate of 4.3 percent, 
Russia's economy is one of the fastest growing big economies in Europe. Unlike 
in 2008, Russia's banking system is now much better protected against 
fluctuations on the global financial market.

Russia is not burdened by dangerously high debt levels. Household debt levels 
in Russia are considerably lower than that of other countries. Total household 
debt came to 10.6 percent of GDP as of April 1, 2012, compared to approximately 
60 percent of GDP in Germany and France, 87 percent in Spain, and 92 percent in 
the USA. As for Russia's public debt, at 9.2 percent of GDP as of May 1, 2012, 
it is minimal compared to the other countries in the G8, G20, and the BRICS 
Group. For comparison, public debt is 81 percent of GDP in Germany, 86 percent 
in France, and 104 percent in the USA. Last year we succeeded to get a 
deficit-free budget and to even make a small profit of 0.8 percent of GDP, we 
therefore earned more money than we spent. Russia's trade surplus stood at $198 
billion.

At the same time however, if revenues received due to favourable oil and 
natural gas market situation are deducted, we will see high budget deficit 
figures. Such deficit resulting from oil and gas revenues deductions has grown 
over the years of the crisis to the maximum level which may be allowed.

We are very much aware that we need to speed up the pace of change. We need to 
do this in order to guarantee sustainable development and reduce our dependence 
on raw material exports. We are therefore working on radically improving the 
investment climate, making Russia a globally competitive place to do business, 
reducing infrastructure bottlenecks, building up our human capital, and 
modernising the economy in general. At the same time, we are continuing to 
respect all of our social commitments. These reforms are all a crucial part of 
the agenda of the Russian authorities at all levels.

This upcoming G20 summit takes place at a time of growing uncertainty. Aside 
from taking measures to correct the serious financial situation in individual 
European Union countries, most of the world's countries also need to strike a 
reasonable balance between fiscal consolidation and strict budget discipline on 
the one hand, and job creation, economic growth, and tackling social problems, 
including maintaining pension system stability on the other hand.

The problems that have emerged in the banking sector and the scale of 
speculation that has brought down markets show that the global financial 
architecture is still in need of reform and still contains many internal risks 
and contradictions. It has yet to gain a firm foundation and be tied to real 
assets and values. Indeed, recent trends on the financial markets show an 
ever-growing divergence with the fundamental indicators in the real sector of 
the economy. This only serves to further fuel the general lack of confidence 
and instability that, as we know, can easily lead to outbreaks of financial 
panic.

The need for new steps is evident. Above all, we need to tighten regulation of 
derivatives trading. We need to ensure consistent implementation of the new 
Basel III financial regulation that reduces the risk of bubbles arising. I 
believe it is in our common interest to facilitate the emergence of new reserve 
currencies and expand their use in global trade and investment. Finally, the 
G20 must fulfill its commitment to reform the international financial 
institutions, including the IMF and the World Bank, in particular by moving 
from talk of increasing the developing countries and `new' economic powers' 
role in these institutions' management to actually taking practical steps in 
this direction and giving them a greater say in drafting and adopting the major 
basic decisions.

In this context I want to stress one point in particular. We all know that 
financial instability inevitably leads to increased trade protectionism. In 
2009, global trade fell by 12 percent, the biggest slide in the entire 
post-World War II period. This was largely because, despite the public 
statements to the contrary, some countries made extensive de-facto use of tough 
protectionist measures to protect their own markets. It is time to recognise 
that governments are on the one hand declaring protectionism unacceptable, but 
on the other hand are devising ever more sophisticated ways to protect their 
own economies, disguising protectionist measures as environmental or technical 
restrictions, for example.

It is time to stop pretending and come to an honest agreement on the acceptable 
level of protectionist measures that governments can take to protect jobs in 
times of global crisis. This is particularly important for Russia as our 
country will join the WTO this year and we intend to take an active part in the 
discussions on the future rules for global trade. In particular, we will make 
every effort to break the deadlock in the Doha Round.

All of these various issues will be on the agenda at the summit in Mexico. They 
will be among our priorities when Russia takes over the presidency in the G20 
next year, as will global energy security issues. We realise how important it 
is to maintain confidence in the G20. Confidence in the organisation will be 
devalued if our joint decisions remain nothing but lofty declarations, 
suspended in mid-air, without real implementation and oversight.

It is equally important to ensure that the G20 does not become just another 
elite club that selfishly looks after its members' interests alone. The sense 
and purpose of our work together is to lay down fair rules for sustainable 
development throughout the entire global economy. This is the line that Russia 
will offer its partners at the upcoming summit in Los Cabos.



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