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G-20 refuses to back US push on China's currency

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Leaders of 20 major economies on Friday refused to back a U.S. push to make China boost its currency's value, keeping alive a dispute that raises fears of a global trade war amid criticism that cheap Chinese exports are costing American jobs.

A joint statement issued by the leaders including President Barack Obama and China's Hu Jintao tried to recreate the unity that was evident when the Group of 20 rich and developing nations held its first summit two years ago during the global financial meltdown.

But deep divisions, especially over the U.S.-China currency dispute, left G-20 officials negotiating all night to draft a watered-down statement for the leaders to endorse.

"Instead of hitting home runs sometimes we're gonna hit singles. But they're really important singles," Obama told a news conference after the summit.

Other leaders also tried to portray the summit as a success, pointing to their pledges to fight protectionism and develop guidelines next year that will measure the imbalances between trade surplus and trade deficit countries.

The G-20's failure to adopt the U.S. stand has underlined Washington's reduced influence on the international stage, especially on economic matters. In another setback, Obama also failed to conclude a free trade agreement this week with South Korea.

The biggest disappointment for the United States was the pledge by the leaders to refrain from "competitive devaluation" of currencies. Such a statement is of little consequence since countries usually only devalue their currencies -- making it less worth against the dollar -- in extreme situations like a severe financial crisis.

The statement decided against using a slightly different wording favored by the U.S. -- "competitive undervaluation," which would have shown the G-20 taking a stronger stance on China's currency policy.

The crux of the dispute is Washington's allegations that Beijing is artificially keeping its currency, the yuan, weak to gain a trade advantage.

U.S. business lobbies say that a cheaper yuan costs American jobs because production moves to China to take advantage of low labor costs and undervalued currency.

A stronger yuan would shrink the U.S. trade deficit with China, which is on track this year to match its 2008 record of $268 billion, and encourage Chinese companies to sell more to their own consumers rather than rely so much on the U.S. and others to buy low-priced Chinese goods.

But the U.S. position has been undermined by its own central bank's decision to print $600 billion to boost a sluggish economy, which is weakening the dollar.

Also, developing countries like Thailand and Indonesia fear that much of the "hot" money will flood their markets, where returns are higher. Such emerging markets could be left vulnerable to a crash if investors later decide to pull out and move their money elsewhere.

Obama said China's currency policy is an "irritant" not just for the United States but for many of its other trading partners. The G-20 countries -- ranging from industrialized nations such as U.S. and Germany to developing ones like China, Brazil and India -- account for 85 percent of the world's economic activity.

"China spends enormous amounts of money intervening in the market to keep it undervalued so what we have said is it is important for China in a gradual fashion to transition to a market based system," Obama said.

The dispute is threatening to resurrect destructive protectionist policies like those that worsened the Great Depression in the 1930s. The biggest fear is that trade barriers will send the global economy back into recession.

The possibility of a currency war "absolutely" remains, said Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega.

Friday's statement is also unlikely to resolve the most vexing problem facing the G-20 members: how to fix a global economy that's long been marked by huge U.S. trade deficits with exporters like China, Germany and Japan.

Americans consume far more in foreign goods and services from these countries than they sell abroad.

The G-20 leaders said they will try to reduce the gaps between nations running large trade surpluses and those running deficits.

The "persistently large imbalances" in current accounts -- a broad measure of a nation's trade and investment with the rest of the world -- would be measured by what they called "indicative guidelines" to be determined later.

The leaders called for the guidelines to be developed by the G-20, along with help from the International Monetary Fund and other global organizations, and for finance ministers and central bank governors to meet in the first half of next year to discuss progress.

Analysts were not convinced.

"Leaders are putting the best face on matters by suggesting that it is the process that matters rather than results," said Stephen Lewis, chief economist for London-based Monument Securities.

"The only concrete agreement seems to be that they should go on measuring the size of the problem rather than doing something about it

Hat tip to 'thatdamngood'for posting in it first

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/G20-refuses-to-back-US-push-apf-746192354.html?x=0
 
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Dudes the language the US Gov is using dosent suggest that they would be tolerating the Chinese actions of devaluing its currencies. The Chinese are forced to make decisions now .. !!!
 
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G20 ends without significant headway

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Broadcast: 12/11/2010

Reporter: Peter Lloyd

The G20 has come to a close in Seoul, with nations once again struggling to resolve important economic issues.
Transcript
LEIGH SALES, PRESENTER: Leaders of the G20 group of major economies have finished their meeting in South Korea right where they began, with an unresolved dispute over currencies and trade.

The leaders did try and paper over their differences with a final agreement that promised, among other things, new guidelines to tackle trade imbalances affecting world growth.

Peter Lloyd reports.

PETER LLOYD, REPORTER: Twenty of the world's most influential leaders arrived in Seoul amid expectations they might use the meeting to strike a grand bargain to help get balance back in the world economy.

As if to remind them of the consequences of daily lure, dock workers in Greece clashed with police in protests outside the finance ministry.

This year, Greece was saved from defaulting its debts by a rescue package put together by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

In return, Athens implemented a raft of methods measures, including cuts to civil servants' pay and pension freezes. These have been deeply unpopular and led to waves of strikes and protests.

The financial crisis in Ireland was a hot topic on the G20 sidelines. Once known as the Celtic Tiger, Ireland has been hit by a wave of bank loan defaults and the Irish government may turn to the EU as soon as the weekend for a massive bailout.

But the gathering in Seoul was overshadowed by a continued big-nation squabbling over currency disputes and the trade imbalances that they produce.

America wants to cut borrowing and export more to the rest of the world. To achieve that they've begun pumping $600 million into the economy to weaken the dollar and give exporters a competitive edge.

BARACK OBAMA, US PRESIDENT: The most important thing that the United States can do for the world economy is to grow. Because we continue to be the world's largest market and a huge engine for all other countries to grow.

PETER LLOYD: President Obama wants China's currency to rise and for its people to save less and start spending more.

But China won't accept any measures that put the brakes on its exports machines, none of which was openly discussed when the two presidents spoke at a media conference.


HU JINTAO, CHINESE PRESIDENT (TRANSLATION): The Chinese side stands ready to work with the US side to increase dialogue, exchanges and cooperation, so that we can move forward.

PETER LLOYD: Smaller economies say they are being punished for the stalemate at the top.

In his last G20 summit, Brazil's outgoing president lashed out at the Americans for devaluing their dollar at everyone else's expense.

LUIZ INACIO LULA DA SILVA, BRAZILIAN PRESIDENT (TRANSLATION): What we want is that the US would value their currency and not devalue their currency, as they're doing today, so that their currency would not inflate the emerging markets.

ANGEL GURRIA, SECRETARY GENERAL ORGANISATION FOR ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT: There are two issues: the value of the exchange rate and the other question is you are exporting to me, Brazil, to me, India, to me, China, to me, Mexico, et cetera; a monetary policy which does not fit my best interests and you are creating bubbles in the stock market; you are creating bubbles in the property market.

PETER LLOYD: After two days of bickering, the leaders pledged to avoid the sort of competitive devaluations that have raised the spectre of currency wars and trade protectionism.

President Obama spoke of a broad agreement.

BARACK OBAMA: The most effective means of lifting people out of poverty is to create sustainable economic growth, growth that will create the markets of the future.

JULIA GILLARD, PRIME MINSTER: I'm also very pleased that here in Seoul we have re-affirmed our commitment to not go down the path of protectionist measures.

PETER LLOYD: But specifics will have to wait until a meeting of technocrats in the first half of next year.

Peter Lloyd, Lateline.

Lateline - 12/11/2010: G20 ends without significant headway
 
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Forget summit failures, look at G20 record

By Christian Oliver, Chris Giles and Alan Beattie in Seoul

Published: November 12 2010 14:43 | Last updated: November 12 2010 14:43

It is easy to brand the G20 a failure. The Group of 20 leading economies is doing little to assuage fears of impending conflict over currencies and trade. Its vague communiqués do little to disguise bitter divisions over how to address ballooning current account imbalances.

But Rhee Chang-yong, South Korea’s sherpa to the G20, bristles at this damning appraisal, which he says obscures the group’s ability to foster co-ordination on vital issues that would otherwise have vanished from the global agenda during the economic crisis.


“In the long-run, people should look at what we have done in development, trade, IMF reform and financial regulation,” he said.

DEVELOPMENT

As a country that has made an astronomic rise from the ashes of the 1950-1953 Korean War, South Korea was keen to use its G20 presidency to style itself as a leader in the field of development. The so-called Seoul consensus, mapped out on Friday, is supposed to steer the focus of international development away from financial handouts to broader factors that encourage economic growth, such as infrastructure.

Mr Rhee says the plan will prove a key part of the South Korean legacy this year but the final wording of the Seoul consensus – intended to replace the much-maligned Washington consensus – has won a lukewarm reception from aid agencies and development economists. As with the rules for current account imbalances, they accuse the G20 of avoiding numerical targets that can be used to hold advanced countries to account in areas such as opening up markets to exports from the developing world.

Cafod, a British charity, describes parts of the Seoul consensus as being “eerily familiar” from the Washington model, for trying to involve the private sector in infrastructure.

“The G20 does not reassess the poor performance of private sector involvement in energy, transport and communication infrastructure investment and their mixed track record on social and environmental impacts experienced since the heyday of the Washington consensus,” said Christina Weller, Cafod’s economics analyst.

Chang Ha-joon, a development economist at Cambridge university, agreed Seoul had shied from promoting some roots of its own success that did not chime with the Washington consensus: protecting infant industries through tariffs and a loose policies on intellectual property.

IMF REFORM

The G20 made a historic breakthrough last month to grant a greater voice to developing nations in the International Monetary Fund, reflecting a shift of global power to emerging heavyweights such as India and China.

European countries will give up two of their eight seats on the 24-member board. More than 6 per cent of IMF voting power will also be transferred to under-represented countries at the fund. China will become the third-biggest member of the 187-strong institution.

Although the principles have been agreed, IMF nations have yet to complete the horse-trading over who the winners and losers will be in a recomposition of the board.

FINANCIAL REGULATION

The G20 has proved the key forum for world leaders to forge a more robust regulatory financial framework to restore confidence in a global banking system whose failures triggered the economic crisis of 2008. The G20 meetings have helped establish tougher regulations on the amount of core capital banks should hold under the so-called Basel III accord.

Regulators have now turned their attention to banks and insurance companies deemed “too big to fail”. Seeking to allay public anger about the use of taxpayers’ money to bail out institutions whose failure would undermine the economy, officials are set to finalise a package of capital surcharges and other safety measures by the middle of next year.

TRADE

The G20 has sought to revive the moribund Doha trade talks, which collapsed in disarray in 2008 with India resisting Washington’s attempts to open its economy to US exports. The G20 has backed its calls for the restoration of the tariff-slicing Doha round with sweeping injunctions against protectionism.

However, the G20 has offered no sense of how to resolve tensions between rich and poor nations that sank the Doha talks.

The rhetoric of promoting commerce has also been undermined by the failure of the US and South Korea to finalise a landmark trade at the G20 summit in Seoul, as both nations had promised. Still, Barack Obama, US president, remained optimistic, arguing the accord could be still be completed in coming weeks.


FT.com / Global Economy - Forget summit failures, look at G20 record
 
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With Warning, Obama Presses China on Currency

24prexy-cnd-articleLarge.jpg


UNITED NATIONS — President Obama increased pressure on China to immediately revalue its currency on Thursday, devoting most of a two-hour meeting with China’s prime minister to the issue and sending the message, according to one of his top aides, that if “the Chinese don’t take actions, we have other means of protecting U.S. interests.”

But Prime Minister Wen Jiabao barely budged beyond his familiar talking points about gradual “reform” of China’s currency policy, leaving it unclear whether Mr. Obama’s message would change Beijing’s economic or political calculus.

The unusual focus on this single issue at such a high level was clearly an effort by the White House to make the case that Mr. Obama was putting American jobs and competitiveness at the top of the agenda in a relationship that has endured strains in recent weeks on everything from territorial disputes to sanctions against Iran and North Korea.

Democrats in Congress are threatening to pass legislation before the midterm elections that would slap huge tariffs on Chinese goods to undermine the advantages Beijing has enjoyed from a currency, the renminbi, that experts say is artificially weakened by 20 to 25 percent.

Mr. Obama’s aides said he was embracing the threat of tariffs and new trade actions against China at the World Trade Organization to gain some leverage over the Chinese, but was also trying to head off any action that would lead to a destructive trade war.

Jeffrey Bader, the senior director for Asia at the National Security Council, told reporters that the two men engaged in “a lengthy discussion about the impact and the politics of the issue.” One Chinese official speculated Thursday that Mr. Obama’s insistence on spending so much time on the issue was motivated by pre-election politics, suggesting that the pressure might abate after early November.

While the United States has been pressing China for years to lift the strict controls on its currency, which keep Chinese exports competitive and more factory workers employed, American voters and lawmakers have only recently seized on exchange rates as a potent political issue. Mr. Obama pressed much harder on Thursday than during a visit to Beijing last year, perhaps because a Chinese commitment several months ago to allow the value of the currency to rise has resulted in a change of less than 2 percent.

The meeting with Mr. Wen came as the United States appeared to lean toward its longtime ally, Japan, in an increasingly heated standoff between China and Japan over who has claim on territory in the East China Sea.

In Washington, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said that China and Japan should sort out the issue themselves, but that “We would fulfill our alliance responsibilities,” a term that clearly referred to the American military alliance with Japan.

But the United States also tried not to inflame the dispute. It barely came up at the meeting between Mr. Obama and Mr. Wen, Mr. Bader said, adding that despite the talk of America’s obligation to back its military ally, “we have no expectation in any known universe that this would escalate to that kind of a level.”

Mr. Obama’s meeting with Mr. Wen, in a spare conference room usually used by members of the Security Council, came minutes after the president told the United Nations General Assembly that his efforts to engage friends and adversaries were beginning to bear fruit.

He called on Arab states to support fragile Middle East peace talks and warned Iran that it would face sustained international pressure if it did not negotiate seriously over its nuclear program.

Iranian officials have hinted they are prepared to resume talks, without setting a date.

“The door remains open to diplomacy should Iran choose to walk through it,” said Mr. Obama, who plans to address the Iranian people directly on Friday in an interview with BBC’s Persian service. “But the Iranian government must demonstrate a clear and credible commitment, and confirm to the world the peaceful intent of its nuclear program.”

If Iran fails to meet its obligations under international nonproliferation treaties, he added, it “must be held accountable.”

In June, the United Nations Security Council imposed its fourth round of sanctions against Iran, which were followed by harsher measures by the United States and European and Asian nations. On Wednesday, Russia made clear that it would not be fulfilling a contract to sell Iran an advanced missile system.

Mr. Obama also called on Israel to extend its partial freeze on building new Jewish settlements in the West Bank, construction that is one of the most contentious issues between Israelis and Palestinians.

The moratorium is set to expire this weekend, and hard-won talks could be stymied if the Israelis fail to extend it and the Palestinians decide to walk away from the table.

“Our position on this issue is well known,” Mr. Obama said. “We believe that the moratorium should be extended. We also believe that talks should press on until completed.”

Clashes on Wednesday between Israeli security forces and Palestinians in the Old City of Jerusalem underscored the fragile state of affairs in the region and the potential for violent outbursts if the negotiations fall apart.

Mr. Obama acknowledged the possibility of “terror, or turbulence, or posturing or petty politics” to disrupt the negotiations, but exhorted world leaders to stand behind the peace process.

“When we come back here next year, we can have an agreement that will lead to a new member of the United Nations, an independent state of Palestine, living in peace with Israel,” he said.

Tonally, Mr. Obama’s speech to the General Assembly was dramatically different from the one he delivered last year, in his maiden appearance as a new president promising change not only at home, but in America’s dealings with the rest of the world. If the 2009 speech was about the promise of a new approach, and often interrupted by applause, this speech was far more about pressing countries to take up what he called their “responsibilities.”

“Last year he sought to signal that U.S. foreign policy was under new management and intended to work better with others, just what his audience wanted to hear,” James M. Lindsay, the director of studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, wrote shortly after the speech was over. “This year he made clear he wants to get things done, and that will require others to do things they would prefer not to do.” He added, “He shouldn’t be surprised to discover that others are slow to follow.”

Mr. Obama, at turns sweeping and philosophical, told the delegates and world leaders that it was “our destiny” to endure a time of recession, war and conflict, and spoke out broadly in support of open governments and human rights.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/24/world/24prexy.html
 
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For the war criminals US, CHina is the usual easy target. Instead of looking on the root cause of their economic problem, US politicians find it more easy to blame China for everything-economic recession, pollution, deforestrastion etc while the US itself is the real root cause of all problems facing humanity. :china::pakistan:
 
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For the war criminals US, CHina is the usual easy target. Instead of looking on the root cause of their economic problem, US politicians find it more easy to blame China for everything-economic recession, pollution, deforestrastion etc while the US itself is the real root cause of all problems facing humanity. :china::pakistan:

The Chinese devaluation of the Yen to make its products more competitive into the Western Markets have severely hit the global trade, The smaller economies including Pakistan get severely affected by this.And Steps like these dont encourage the promotion of Global Trade.
Such action only Point towards China's ambitions to become a monopolist in the Global Trade by devaluing there Yen hence keeping there Factories running and employing there Masses This indirectly affects hugely to the developing countries which dont actually have much Options to grow.
If these things continue the it will likely end up encouraging Protectionism like that of 1930 and we all know what horror happened after that...!!!
 
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If the Chinese don’t take actions, we have other means of protecting U.S. interests.
an angry young man there.............
....these can can statement can surely terrorize Wen Jiabao . now that the US is aggressive , looks like china will have to revalue it policy of currency....
 
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