Financial Summit: Leaders Agree on Action Plan

Nov 17, 2008

The world's leading industrial nations and emerging economies (G-20) aim to cooperate more closely in the future in order to overcome the financial crisis. The Summit on Financial Markets and the World Economy has identified an appropriate response to the crisis, Chancellor Angela Merkel declared in Washington on November 15. Together, the international community aims to make markets more predictable, underscored Federal Finance Minister Peer Steinbrück, which should ensure greater security and stability.

President Bush greets Chancellor Merkel
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President Bush greets Chancellor Merkel at the White House on November 14.
(© Bundesregierung/Steffen Kugler)

Over the next 100 days the G-20 states intend to take about 50 emergency measures, Merkel and Steinbrück reported after the meeting.
 
The action plan adopted in Washington contains important steps that should lead to a global economic order, the Chancellor emphasized, and thus ensure an “international dimension of the social market economy.”
 

Regulation and supervision without “blind spots”
 
The document, which was adopted by two dozen countries and representatives of international organizations, provides above all for more effective supervision of the financial world. There should not be any uncontrolled markets, market players or products anywhere in the world,  Chancellor Merkel stated.
 
Secondly, the G-20 states intend to produce a common response to the economic challenges entailed by the financial crisis. The World Bank, for instance, is to be enabled to secure major investment projects of emerging economies and developing countries, especially private investments in the infrastructure of these states, which are now also suffering as a result of the credit crunch.
 
“We must do everything possible to restore global growth, or at least to ensure that growth rates do not fall too far,” the Chancellor said. As a major exporter, Germany has a particular interest in seeing the global economy recover.

For a global economic order
 
The heads of state and government meeting in Washington also spoke out decisively against any attempts to isolate markets and any new forms of protectionism. “We will do all we can to resolve the remaining problems at the Doha Round of trade talks before the end of the year,” declared Chancellor Merkel. The ministers responsible for trade were mandated to clear the obstacles still blocking the path of the ongoing round of world trade talks.
 
The G-20 governments agreed for now not to put in place any new obstacles to trade within the next 12 months.
 
Concrete proposals from Germany
 

Finance Minister Steinbrück and Chancellor Merkel
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Finance Minister Steinbrück and Chancellor Merkel confer before the start of the session.
(© picture-alliance/ dpa)

Chancellor Merkel and Finance Minister Steinbrück were thoroughly prepared for the G-20 summit. A group of experts led by economist Otmar Issing had drawn up well-founded proposals for the German government to take to Washington. These went from a risk map of the world to proposed modifications to the incentives system for executives, and an international lending register.
 
The experts came to the conclusion that better regulations for the markets are just as important as the engagement of the state to ensure low interest rates and greater liquidity.

New responsibilities for old institutions
 
The governments of the European Union had already coordinated their objectives one week earlier in Brussels. One aim of the Europeans is to create a new role for the International Monetary Fund (IMF). With the appropriate authority and resources, the IMF could one day be responsible for monitoring international financial markets. Until then, the Financial Stability Forum, established by the G-7 states, should in the opinion of the G-20 be more closely linked to the IMF.
 
The Washington summit was the first meeting at which the industrial nations and the emerging economies cooperated so closely and so decisively. Chancellor Merkel is convinced that “these 20 states reflect a fairly accurate image of the world as a whole.” Europe was represented at the summit by the heads of government of France, the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain and Germany.  

Group of 20

The group of the 20 most important industrial nations and emerging economies (G-20) is an informal forum intended to encourage dialogue among members with the goal of ensuring global economic stability. The summit meeting in Washington was the first to bring together heads of state and government. Since 1999 it has always been the finance ministers of member countries who meet.

Alongside Germany, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, France, the United Kingdom, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Canada, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey and the USA make up the G-20. In Washington they were joined by Spain and the Netherlands.The European Union is also a member of the G-20, represented by the acting EU president and the European Central Bank.

Source: REGIERUNGonline

Summit Declaration

Summit in Washington, DC

"We are determined to enhance our cooperation and work together to restore global growth and achieve needed reforms in the world's financial systems."