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Text of G20 joint statement
Marketwatch ^ | March 14, 2009 2:01 p.m. EDT | By MarketWatch

Posted on 03/14/2009 11:55:14 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach

HORSHAM, England (MarketWatch) -- The joint statement issued by the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers on Saturday:

We, the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors, met today to prepare for the Leaders' London Summit. We agreed further action to restore global growth and support lending, and reforms to strengthen the global financial system.

Restoring Global Growth

1. We have taken decisive, coordinated and comprehensive action to boost demand and jobs, and are prepared to take whatever action is necessary until growth is restored. We commit to fight all forms of protectionism and maintain open trade and investment.

2. Our key priority now is to restore lending by tackling, where needed, problems in the financial system head on, through continued liquidity support, bank recapitalisation and dealing with impaired assets, through a common framework (attached). We reaffirm our commitment to take all necessary actions to ensure the soundness of systemically important institutions.

3. Fiscal expansion is providing vital support for growth and jobs. Acting together strengthens the impact and the exceptional policy actions announced so far must be implemented without delay. We are committed to deliver the scale of sustained effort necessary to restore growth, and call on the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to assess the actions taken and the actions required. We will ensure the restoration of growth and long-run fiscal sustainability.

4. Interest rates have been cut aggressively in most countries, and G20 central banks will maintain expansionary policies as long as needed, using the full range of monetary policy instruments, including unconventional policy instruments, consistent with price stability.


(Excerpt) Read more at marketwatch.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: g20meeting; globalfinances

1 posted on 03/14/2009 11:55:14 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

“Restoring Global Growth”

To paraphrase the G20 - what we propose is the hair of the dog.
Like the stampede for global growth has nothing to do with the problem.


2 posted on 03/14/2009 12:04:51 PM PDT by ex-snook ("But above all things, truth beareth away the victory.")
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

So far this sounds like a back handed slap at boy Geitner and the obamination.


3 posted on 03/14/2009 12:05:05 PM PDT by eleni121 (EN TOUTO NIKA!! + In this sign Conquer! +)
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To: All
Further into the text a Washington Action Plan was mentioned....See this ...from a cache....:

Washington Action Plan

************************EXCERPT***********************

Overall News:

LondonSummit

Action Plan to implement principles for reform
This Action Plan sets forth a comprehensive work plan to implement the five agreed principles for reform. Our finance ministers will work to ensure that the taskings set forth in this Action Plan are fully and vigorously implemented. They are responsible for the development and implementation of these recommendations drawing on the ongoing work of relevant bodies, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), an expanded Financial Stability Forum (FSF), and standard setting bodies.

Strengthening transparency and accountability


The key global accounting standards bodies should work to enhance guidance for valuation of securities, also taking into account the valuation of complex, illiquid products, especially during times of stress.

Accounting standard setters should significantly advance their work to address weaknesses in accounting and disclosure standards for off-balance sheet vehicles.

Regulators and accounting standard setters should enhance the required disclosure of complex financial instruments by firms to market participants.

With a view toward promoting financial stability, the governance of the international accounting standard setting body should be further enhanced, including by undertaking a review of its membership, in particular in order to ensure transparency, accountability, and an appropriate relationship between this independent body and the relevant authorities.

Private sector bodies that have already developed best practices for private pools of capital and/or hedge funds should bring forward proposals for a set of unified best practices. Finance Ministers should assess the adequacy of these proposals, drawing upon the analysis of regulators, the expanded FSF, and other relevant bodies.

The key global accounting standards bodies should work intensively toward the objective of creating a single high-quality global standard.

Regulators, supervisors, and accounting standard setters, as appropriate, should work with each other and the private sector on an ongoing basis to ensure consistent application and enforcement of high-quality accounting standards.

Financial institutions should provide enhanced risk disclosures in their reporting and disclose all losses on an ongoing basis, consistent with international best practice, as appropriate. Regulators should work to ensure that a financial institution’ financial statements include a complete, accurate, and timely picture of the firm’s activities (including off-balance sheet activities) and are reported on a consistent and regular basis.

Enhancing sound regulation


The IMF, expanded FSF, and other regulators and bodies should develop recommendations to mitigate pro-cyclicality, including the review of how valuation and leverage, bank capital, executive compensation, and provisioning practices may exacerbate cyclical trends.

To the extent countries or regions have not already done so, each country or region pledges to review and report on the structure and principles of its regulatory system to ensure it is compatible with a modern and increasingly globalized financial system. To this end, all G-20 members commit to undertake a Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP) report and support the transparent assessments of countries’ national regulatory systems.

The appropriate bodies should review the differentiated nature of regulation in the banking, securities, and insurance sectors and provide a report outlining the issue and making recommendations on needed improvements. A review of the scope of financial regulation, with a special emphasis on institutions, instruments, and markets that are currently unregulated, along with ensuring that all systemically-important institutions are appropriately regulated, should also be undertaken.

National and regional authorities should review resolution regimes and bankruptcy laws in light of recent experience to ensure that they permit an orderly wind-down of large complex cross-border financial institutions.

Definitions of capital should be harmonized in order to achieve consistent measures of capital and capital adequacy.

Regulators should take steps to ensure that credit rating agencies meet the highest standards of the international organization of securities regulators and that they avoid conflicts of interest, provide greater disclosure to investors and to issuers, and differentiate ratings for complex products. This will help ensure that credit rating agencies have the right incentives and appropriate oversight to enable them to perform their important role in providing unbiased information and assessments to markets.

The international organization of securities regulators should review credit rating agencies’ adoption of the standards and mechanisms for monitoring compliance.

Authorities should ensure that financial institutions maintain adequate capital in amounts necessary to sustain confidence. International standard setters should set out strengthened capital requirements for banks’ structured credit and securitization activities.
Supervisors and regulators, building on the imminent launch of central counterparty services for credit default swaps (CDS) in some countries, should: speed efforts to reduce the systemic risks of CDS and over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives transactions; insist that market participants support exchange traded or electronic trading platforms for CDS contracts; expand OTC derivatives market transparency; and ensure that the infrastructure for OTC derivatives can support growing volumes.

Credit Ratings Agencies that provide public ratings should be registered.

Supervisors and central banks should develop robust and internationally consistent approaches for liquidity supervision of, and central bank liquidity operations for, cross-border banks.

Regulators should develop enhanced guidance to strengthen banks’ risk management practices, in line with international best practices, and should encourage financial firms to re-examine their internal controls and implement strengthened policies for sound risk management.

Regulators should develop and implement procedures to ensure that financial firms implement policies to better manage liquidity risk, including by creating strong liquidity cushions.

Supervisors should ensure that financial firms develop processes that provide for timely and comprehensive measurement of risk concentrations and large counterparty risk positions across products and geographies.

Firms should reassess their risk management models to guard against stress and report to supervisors on their efforts.

The Basel Committee should study the need for and help develop firms’ new stress testing models, as appropriate.

Financial institutions should have clear internal incentives to promote stability, and action needs to be taken, through voluntary effort or regulatory action, to avoid compensation schemes which reward excessive short-term returns or risk taking.

Banks should exercise effective risk management and due diligence over structured products and securitization.

International standard setting bodies, working with a broad range of economies and other appropriate bodies, should ensure that regulatory policy makers are aware and able to respond rapidly to evolution and innovation in financial markets and products.

Authorities should monitor substantial changes in asset prices and their implications for the macroeconomy and the financial system.

Our national and regional authorities should work together to enhance regulatory cooperation between jurisdictions on a regional and international level.

National and regional authorities should work to promote information sharing about domestic and cross-border threats to market stability and ensure that national (or regional, where applicable) legal provisions are adequate to address these threats.

National and regional authorities should also review business conduct rules to protect markets and investors, especially against market manipulation and fraud and strengthen their cross-border cooperation to protect the international financial system from illicit actors. In case of misconduct, there should be an appropriate sanctions regime.

National and regional authorities should implement national and international measures that protect the global financial system from uncooperative and non-transparent jurisdictions that pose risks of illicit financial activity.

The Financial Action Task Force should continue its important work against money laundering and terrorist financing, and we support the efforts of the World Bank - UN Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) Initiative.

Tax authorities, drawing upon the work of relevant bodies such as the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), should continue efforts to promote tax information exchange. Lack of transparency and a failure to exchange tax information should be vigorously addressed.

Supervisors should collaborate to establish supervisory colleges for all major cross-border financial institutions, as part of efforts to strengthen the surveillance of cross-border firms. Major global banks should meet regularly with their supervisory college for comprehensive discussions of the firm’s activities and assessment of the risks it faces.

Regulators should take all steps necessary to strengthen cross-border crisis management arrangements, including on cooperation and communication with each other and with appropriate authorities, and develop comprehensive contact lists and conduct simulation exercises, as appropriate.

Authorities, drawing especially on the work of regulators, should collect information on areas where convergence in regulatory practices such as accounting standards, auditing, and deposit insurance is making progress, is in need of accelerated progress, or where there may be potential for progress.

Authorities should ensure that temporary measures to restore stability and confidence have minimal distortions and are unwound in a timely, well-sequenced and coordinated manner.

The FSF should expand to a broader membership of emerging economies.

The IMF, with its focus on surveillance, and the expanded FSF, with its focus on standard setting, should strengthen their collaboration, enhancing efforts to better integrate regulatory and supervisory responses into the macro-prudential policy framework and conduct early warning exercises.

The IMF, given its universal membership and core macro-financial expertise, should, in close coordination with the FSF and others, take a leading role in drawing lessons from the current crisis, consistent with its mandate.

We should review the adequacy of the resources of the IMF, the World Bank Group and other multilateral development banks and stand ready to increase them where necessary. The IFIs should also continue to review and adapt their lending instruments to adequately meet their members’ needs and revise their lending role in the light of the ongoing financial crisis.

We should explore ways to restore emerging and developing countries’ access to credit and resume private capital flows which are critical for sustainable growth and development, including ongoing infrastructure investment.

In cases where severe market disruptions have limited access to the necessary financing for counter-cyclical fiscal policies, multilateral development banks must ensure arrangements are in place to support, as needed, those countries with a good track record and sound policies.

We underscored that the Bretton Woods Institutions must be comprehensively reformed so that they can more adequately reflect changing economic weights in the world economy and be more responsive to future challenges. Emerging and developing economies should have greater voice and representation in these institutions.

The IMF should conduct vigorous and even-handed surveillance reviews of all countries, as well as giving greater attention to their financial sectors and better integrating the reviews with the joint IMF/World Bank financial sector assessment programs. On this basis, the role of the IMF in providing macro-financial policy advice would be strengthened.

Advanced economies, the IMF, and other international organizations should provide capacity-building programs for emerging market economies and developing countries on the formulation and the implementation of new major regulations, consistent with international standards.


4 posted on 03/14/2009 12:07:01 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (What happened to my IRAs)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
******************************snip from the TEXT of the G20 Statement***********************

Strengthening the Financial System

6. To further strengthen the global financial system we have completed the immediate steps in the Washington Action Plan and we welcome the Financial Stability Forum's (FSF) expansion to all G20 members. We remain focused on the medium term actions, and make recommendations to the London Summit to ensure:

5 posted on 03/14/2009 12:09:31 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (What happened to my IRAs)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

bttt


6 posted on 03/14/2009 12:17:54 PM PDT by The Californian (The door to the room of success swings on the hinges of opposition. Bob Jones, Sr.)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

I still see nothing that leads me to believe they want to help. The ONLY thing that can be done consistently with great effect is to CUT TAXES. No mention of that in there at all.


7 posted on 03/14/2009 12:18:51 PM PDT by Danae (Amerikan Unity My Ass)
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To: All
Related thread:

Milestones in the ( Global ) meltdown

8 posted on 03/14/2009 12:21:01 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (What happened to my IRAs)
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To: eleni121

“So far this sounds like a back handed slap at boy Geitner and the obamination.”

My prediction: Obama will come to the G 20. In private the nations of the world will ask him to re-regulate (horrors!) the near-criminal financial services sector. He will shrug them off. They will threaten not to buy our tax-cut debt any more. He won’t listen. Then he will smile and walk outside and the world media will submit to his glow.


9 posted on 03/14/2009 12:29:04 PM PDT by Shermy ("The whole world has financed the United States, ...they have a reciprocal debt with the planet.")
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To: eleni121

“So far this sounds like a back handed slap at boy Geitner and the obamination.”

My prediction: Obama will come to the G 20. In private the nations of the world will ask him to re-regulate (horrors!) the near-criminal financial services sector. He will shrug them off. They will threaten not to buy our tax-cut debt any more. He won’t listen. Then he will smile and walk outside and the world media will submit to his glow.


10 posted on 03/14/2009 12:29:18 PM PDT by Shermy ("The whole world has financed the United States, ...they have a reciprocal debt with the planet.")
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To: Danae

Except for Germany most Euro nations have lower corporate taxes than we do.

http://www.taxfoundation.org/blog/show/1471.html


11 posted on 03/14/2009 12:53:15 PM PDT by eleni121 (EN TOUTO NIKA!! + In this sign Conquer! +)
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To: Danae; All

This is better-—the US imposes the highest tax rate in the world

http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/03/us_companies_pay_the_highest_t.html


12 posted on 03/14/2009 12:54:47 PM PDT by eleni121 (EN TOUTO NIKA!! + In this sign Conquer! +)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

This is an admission that their version of globalism has failed...And it will continue to fail until globalism goes into full production...

But who gave these people authority to go global???

The ‘hot potato’ is Protectionism...The American rep(?) says, I won’t protect America or Americans...The German says, I won’t protect Germany or Germans, blah, blah, blah...

They don’t see each other as Americans or Germans...Or French or Australians...That’s old hat stuff...

We need to get rid of those monikers as well...There aren’t any Americans, Mexicans or Canadians, or Bolivians...We’re just people of the world...

We’re just worker ants on their globe...And they’re going to shuffle productivity and prosperity around their globe for the benefit of the globe...

Why should Americans be any more propserous than Ukranians or Indians??? We’re just ants on the big ant hill...

This is how they think and this is the road they are forcing us down...

Any American who is against American Protectionism shoud be lined up against the wall, in my humble opinion...


13 posted on 03/14/2009 12:56:15 PM PDT by Iscool (I don't understand all that I know...)
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To: Iscool
"Any American who is against American Protectionism shoud be lined up against the wall, in my humble opinion..."

Then you agree with George Washington and the other "chauvinistic" "Neanderthals" who established the USA. How could you? ;-)

Just stop buying anything that you don't really need. Save your money and resources. Millions of others have had it with the crooks making dirty deals between big business and political offices and are already doing the same, until we see moral and honest leadership. Start a hobby toward producing anything that's truly useful.


14 posted on 03/14/2009 1:51:52 PM PDT by familyop (As painful as the global laxative might be, maybe our "one world" needs a good cleaning.)
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