G-20: Focus on
global growth
-DR. ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL
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Despite signs of improvement, global growth remains uneven and
well below potential, while unemployment remains stubbornly high in many
places. All tall claims and forecasts by the regimes about steady economic
growth are incorrect or farce, meant to boost the ruling party image.
The world's top 20 economies, led obviously by the USA have, upon
a conclave in Australian capital Sydney. on 22nd February,
adopted a soft target of adding at least 2 percentage points to growth over
five years, signaling optimism that the worst of crisis-era austerity was
behind them. The G-20 members are the USA, the European Union, Turkey,
Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, India,
Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Russia, Saudi Arabia and South
Africa.
The key focus of the meeting was exploring ways to restore global
growth amid indications that the world's largest economies are once again
slowing. Hockey, who says boosting private investment in infrastructure would
help stimulate growth, wants G-20 leaders to commit to a global growth target
higher than the International Monetary Fund's forecast, which is 3.7 percent this
year.
The market turmoil sparked by the Federal Reserve's steps toward
removing the US economy from life support is expected to be a top agenda item
when finance chiefs from the world's big economies met in Sydney this weekend.
The G-20, which represents around 85 percent of the global
economy, is made up of both wealthy nations and emerging economies from the USA
to South Africa, China and Saudi Arabia. The world's rich nations pushed back
on Friday against emerging market complaints about the spillover effects of
their monetary policies, saying they had to get their own houses in order and
get with the agenda of boosting global growth.
The meeting's host, Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey, said the
Federal Reserve's decision to begin scaling back its stimulus was a key part of
discussions, along with reinvigorating global growth. Australia spearheaded the
push for growth in the face of some skepticism, notably from Germany. Opening
the two-day meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers,
Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey said support was building for setting a firm
goal for growth.
The idea of setting concrete goals for the G20 has caused nothing
but friction in the past, with proposals to target fiscal and current account
deficits coming to nothing in the end. The proposal has already drawn
skepticism, with governments criticizing the idea as a "slightly
antiquated form for economic planning".
As finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the Group of 20
developed and emerging countries gathered in Sydney, many were already talking
at cross purposes. Emerging nations want the US Federal Reserve to calibrate
its winding down of stimulus so as to mitigate the impact on their economies
and financial markets. Developed members reply that the troubles in the
emerging world are mostly homegrown and domestic interest rates have to be set
with domestic recoveries in mind.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned advanced economies to
avoid prematurely rolling back their stimulus programs. The need for some sort
of fresh stimulus was highlighted by a grim report from The Organization for
Economic Co-operation and Development which warned that sweeping reforms were
urgently needed to boost productivity and lower barriers to trade to avoid a new
era of slow growth and stubbornly high unemployment. In December, the US
central bank said it would start reducing its monthly Treasury and mortgage
bond purchases, intended to keep interest rates low and support economic
recovery in the aftermath of the global recession. Investors responded by
pulling out of emerging markets and funneling their money to the US in hopes of
higher returns, which contributed to sharp falls in stock markets and the
currencies of some developing countries.
Ultimately, the Federal Reserve has to operate in a manner that is
consistent with its domestic mandate. Federal Reserve Board Chair Janet Yellen
said the Fed would take "further measured steps" to reduce its bond
buying if the US economy continues to improve.
In a letter to G-20 members, US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said
boosting global growth and creating more jobs will be the G-20's top priority.
Lew is attending the meeting and plans to meet with Hockey and finance
ministers for Germany, Japan, Brazil and Turkey. Lew told reporters in Sydney
on Friday. "The growth strategies that we will be developing must be
ambitious in substance and address both deficiencies in near-term demand as
well as longer-term economic challenges."
Another key item was the failure of the USA to pass the 2010 IMF
reform package. Last month, Congress rejected a funding request from Obama that
would have doubled the IMF's lending capacity to about $733 billion and
increased the voting power of emerging economies. Australia insists the USA to
opt for quick reforms for securing global economic stability. France's finance
minister, Pierre Moscovici, welcomed a goal of lifting world growth by a total
of 2.5 percentage points over five years, calling it ambitious but "not
unrealistic". Germany had dropped its opposition to setting an overall
target, as long as there were no goals imposed for individual states. Jens
Weidmann, the German head of the country's central bank, called quantitative
targets "problematic". And Nhlanhla Nene, South Africa's Deputy
Finance Minister, said the target would be meaningless unless issues faced by
emerging economies such as inequality, high unemployment, and volatile global
financial conditions were addressed.
The IMF has forecast global growth of 3.75 percent for this year
and 4 percent in 2015. The plan borrows wholesale from an International
Monetary Fund paper prepared for the Sydney meeting which estimated that
structural reforms would raise world growth by about 0.5 percentage point per
year over the next five years, boosting global output by $2.25 trillion. The
laundry list of reforms run the usual gamut of liberalizing product and labor
markets, lowering barriers to trade, attracting more women into the workforce
and boosting investment in infrastructure.
European Union's Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner said
the bloc would back the growth target for the G20 group that accounts for 85
percent of global economic output provided it came with a firm commitment to
bold reforms. He suggested that reform progress could be monitored by the IMF
and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and that EU's
policy coordination and surveillance could serve as a model.
The emerging members have also been pressing for the US Federal
Reserve to try to avoid sparking market volatility through better messaging as
its throttles back on asset buying. There was never much expectation the Fed
would consider actually slowing the pace of tapering, but its emerging peers
were hoping for more cooperation on policy dealing effectively with market
volatility.
Others were pointing out that troubles of hardest-hit emerging
economies, such as Brazil and Turkey, were largely home-made and the Fed's
tapering was in fact a good thing: a sign of US economy's improving health.
Even Indonesia, one of the "Fragile Five" major emerging economies,
said the Fed's gradual withdrawal of stimulus was not to blame for all the ills
of developing world.
US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said that the emerging markets need
to take steps of their own to get their fiscal house in order and put
structural reforms in place. Lew said it's a cross-cutting theme to what we see
as the challenge for the global economy. The US recovery is healthy and moving
very much in the right direction and picking up velocity, but it can't make up
for a lack of demand and growth in the other key economies. He called on China,
Japan and Europe to make domestic demand the engine room of growth. That was a
sentiment very much echoed by the finance ministers of Japan, Britain and
Germany. German views that emerging countries first had to do their homework,
before demanding solidarity from the rest of the G20. Japan's Taro Aso said the
Fed's tapering of its stimulus program was positive as it reflected an
improving US economy, even if it raised the risk of sharp capital outflows from
other countries.
QE tapering should be undertaken in a very orderly manner and
carefully calibrated given the global economy today is very much
interconnected, quantitative easing, usually in the form of central bank
purchases of bonds or other assets.
Developing nations from South Africa to Turkey to Russia have seen
their currencies crumble in recent months as the prospect of higher returns in
the USA sucked foreign funds from their economies. South Korea Deputy Prime
Minister, Minister of Strategy and Finance Hyun Oh Seok suggested the Fed and
other major central banks could at least strive to avoid surprises in their
policy.
The international lending agency's governing board gave a
green-light to the overhaul in 2010, and approval by Congress is the last
remaining roadblock for it to take effect. The onus would be on the rich
nations to pick up the baton on growth from the developing countries, which had
carried the world economy in the wake of the global financial crisis.
Still there were no details on how or whether the G20 would police
each country's progress on the reforms, many of which would likely be
politically unpopular at home.
The two-day meeting ended on 23rd February with a
round of news conferences by top officials, including European Central Bank
President Mario Draghi and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde.
Australia is acting as president of the G20 this year, following
Russia in 2013 and ahead of Turkey next year. Australia claims it is trying to
bring some much-needed focus to the G20, proposing members sign on to ambitious
growth agendas, and hold each other to account for delivering them.
The Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers meeting is a
precursor to the main G-20 summit that will be held in the Australian city of
Brisbane in November.
Communiqué
A draft of the communiqué highlighted how the push for growth had
trumped concerns about volatility in emerging markets that had threatened to
overshadow the meeting. It commits to developing new measures to significantly
raise global growth, while maintaining fiscal sustainability The G20 recognizes
accommodative monetary policy settings in advanced economies will need to
normalize in due course, in line with stronger growth. Many developed nations
seek a common target for global growth. Developed market policymakers see
little risk of the recent market turmoil spiraling into the kind of contagion
which prompted concerted and coordinated action from the G20 following the
global financial crisis.
The final communique from the two-day meeting of Group 20 finance
ministers and central bankers in Sydney said they would aim to boost collective
growth by "more than 2 percent. It included a pledge to take concrete
action to increase investment and employment, among other reforms.
The growth plan borrows wholesale from an IMF paper prepared for
the G20 meeting, which estimated that structural reforms would raise world
growth by about 0.5 percentage points per year over the next five years,
boosting global output by $2.25 trillion. The IMF has forecast global growth of
3.75 percent for this year and 4 percent in 2015.
The G20 communique also stated that it "deeply regrets"
that progress on giving emerging nations more say in the International Monetary
Fund had stalled. Major emerging powers including India, China, Brazil and
Russia, have long lobbied for increased voting power in the IMF to reflect
their growing share of the world economy, but the changes have been blocked by
the US Congress. There was a nod to concerns by emerging nations that the
Federal Reserve considers the impact of its policy tapering, with the
communique saying central banks would be mindful of the effects on the global
economy.
G20 meeting is not able to lay down a real and tangible framework
for an increase in the growth of the global economy over the next five years.
The target remains vague at the moment, with no road map on how nations intend
to get there or repercussions if they never arrive. The aim was to come up with
the goal now, then have each country develops an action plan and a growth
strategy for delivery at a November summit of G20 leaders in Brisbane.
Agreeing on any goal is a step forward for the group that has
failed in the past to agree on fiscal and current account targets. And it was a
sea change from recent meetings where the debate was still on where their focus
should lie: on growth or budget austerity.
If adopted and implemented, the plan would be a departure for the
G20, as previous attempts to set fiscal and current account targets have
faltered. And while Canada's central bank chief Stephen Poloz called the goal
"aspirational" and doubts remain about its action.
The major
message from G20 in Sydney is that the emerging markets should do their own
homework. It would give the group fresh focus and mark a sea change from recent
meetings where the debate was all about growth versus budget austerity. But
nothing is new in this.
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