Finance Chiefs Endorse G7 Action Plan
By Lesley Wroughton | 11 October 2008 (Latest)
WASHINGTON (Reuters)— Finance leaders from the International Monetary Fund's 185 member countries late Saturday endorsed a plan announced by major economies to chart a course out of the credit crisis. The International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC), chaired by Egyptian Finance Minister Youssef Boutros-Ghali, called for "exceptional vigilance, coordination, and readiness to take bold action" to address the crisis. Boutros-Ghali said that all 185 IMF member countries, including emerging and developing economies, supported the Group of Seven plan. [[BUT, how about taking 'bold action'!?!: normxxx]]
"We are committed to the plan[!?!] of action," Boutros-Ghali said. "This is an essential element for restoring confidence." The G7 on Friday vowed 'to take all necessary steps' to unfreeze credit markets and ensure banks can raise money, but offered no collective course of action to avert a deep global recession. IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said the committee agreed the IMF should take the lead in looking more in depth at what went wrong and coordinate with other institutions. [[Fiddling while Rome burns!?!: normxxx]]
He said the fund was the right forum for the job, given its universal membership, and that the IMF stood ready with resources to help any country facing financial difficulties due to the crisis. The IMF cautioned that emerging economies may experience spillover effects from the financial crisis and it was important that they preserve economic stability. "For these reasons, it is critically important that collaborative action be coordinated between advanced and emerging economies," the panel said. In advanced economies, policies need to provide "essential stimulus in the face of the risk of a pronounced economic downturn, as confidence in the financial system is restored."
IMF Warns Of Financial Meltdown
WASHINGTON/COLOMBEY-LES-DEUX-EGLISES, France (Reuters)— The IMF warned early Saturday that the global financial system was on the brink of meltdown, while France and Germany pushed ahead with a pan-European crisis response to try to prevent the worst global downturn in decades. At a joint news conference, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel said they had "prepared a certain number of decisions" to present at a Sunday meeting of European leaders as they work feverishly to restore blocked credit markets to working order.
The United States appealed for patience, but the International Monetary Fund stressed that time was running short after leading industrialized nations failed to agree on concrete measures to end the crisis at a meeting on Friday. "Intensifying solvency concerns about a number of the largest U.S.-based and European financial institutions have pushed the global financial system to the brink of systemic meltdown," IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn said.
President George W. Bush huddled with Group of Seven economic chiefs and officials from the IMF and World Bank, and said top industrial nations grasped the gravity of the crisis and 'would work together' to solve it. "I'm confident that the world's major economies can overcome the challenges we face," Bush said, adding that Washington was working as fast as possible to implement a $700 billion financial bailout package approved a week ago.
"The benefits will not be realized overnight, but as these actions take effect, they will help restore stability to our markets and confidence to our financial institutions." Confidence has been in short supply and panic has swept through global markets, driving stocks to a five-year low on Friday and prompting banks to hoard cash. That has choked off lending to businesses and households, threatening to turn a global economic slowdown into a dangerously deep recession.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said risks to the global economy were "the most serious and challenging in recent memory."
European Unity
An emergency meeting of euro zone leaders on Sunday will discuss a bank rescue package, taking a British initiative to guarantee lending between banks as a reference point, a source close to the French presidency said. France's Sarkozy said euro zone countries were working on a joint solution, but declined to provide specifics. He planned to meet with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown shortly before Sunday's euro zone gathering.
Britain's rescue plan, launched last week, makes available 50 billion pounds ($86 billion) of taxpayers' money for injection into its banks and, crucially, calls for underwriting interbank lending, which has all but frozen around the globe. Germany was also considering injecting capital into its banks, (German Prime Minister) Merkel said on Saturday. The world's 'rich' nations vowed on Friday to take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit markets and ensure banks can raise money— but they offered no specifics on a collective course of action to avert the recession threat.
In a surprisingly brief statement after a 3-1/2 hour meeting, the G7— the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan— stopped short of backing the British interbank lending guarantee, something many on Wall Street saw as vital to end growing market panic. [[Still trying to nickel and dime TEOTWAWKI!: normxxx]] Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard University professor and former IMF chief economist, said the G7 would have served better adopting some version of the British plan so that banks could feel confident enough to loosen their grip on lending.
"Saying that they'll take all steps necessary leaves hanging the question of whether they know what is best and necessary," he told Reuters. "It was a signature moment for the G7. I think markets are going to be very disappointed." European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said markets needed time to digest a series of dramatic steps taken by world central banks in recent days, including pouring billions of dollars into financial markets and lowering interest rates in the broadest coordinated cut on record.
Working Around The Clock
U.S. Treasury's Paulson said it was "naive" to think that the G7 would endorse a one-size-fits-all approach to ending the credit crisis because there were major differences between the countries and their financial systems. He said the Bush administration was scrambling to put together a plan to buy direct stakes in American banks to shore up balance sheets riddled with heavy credit losses from the 14-month crisis that began with failing U.S. mortgage loans.
"We're going to do it as we can do it in a proper way that will be effective. Trust me, we're not wasting time, we're working around the clock," Paulson said late on Friday after the G7 meeting broke up. But even as Paulson and his fellow finance ministers insisted that they were working as fast as possible, there were signs the economy was credit-starved and deteriorating fast.
The U.S. auto sector has been particularly hard-hit. General Motors has had talks with smaller rival Chrysler LLC about a merger that would combine the No. 1 and No. 3 American automakers at a time when both are struggling to cut costs and shore up cash, according to a source briefed on the matter. Financial weekly Barron's reported that GM was preparing to approach the U.S. Federal Reserve about borrowing money directly from the central bank because the logjam in credit markets had shut it out of other kinds of borrowing.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
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