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Top economic powers endorse plan to try to avert financial
crises
WASHINGTON: Finance officials
from the world’s top economic powers endorsed a plan aimed at
preventing another financial crisis like the credit and mortgage
debacles that erupted in the United States and quickly sent
tremors around the globe.
Rapid implementation” of the
plan will not only enhance the resilience of the global
financial system for the longer term but should help to support
confidence and improve the functioning of the markets,” the G7
officials said in a joint statement Friday.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke hosted the Group of
Seven discussions, where officials embraced a plan that would
seek to increase the openness, or transparency, of financial
markets and to sharpen regulators’ response to urgent financial
problems.
Besides the United States, the
other members of the G7 are Japan, Germany, Britain, France,
Italy and Canada. Friday’s action preceded the weekend meetings
of the 185-nation International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank.
Risks to the United States and
the global economy have intensified since finance officials from
the Group of Seven countries last gathered here in October. Many
economists now believe the United States has fallen into a
recession and the odds of a worldwide downturn have risen
sharply to one in four according to the IMF, a global
financial firefighting institution.
Even as the financial officials
talked about the best ways to battle future financial
emergencies, Wall Street took another plunge. The Dow Jones
tumbled more than 250 points.
The turmoil in global financial
markets remains challenging and more protracted than we had
anticipated,” the G7 officials said.
In the United States, where
credit troubles sprang forth with a vengeance last August and
quickly spread financial turmoil worldwide, the damage is sorely
felt. Foreclosures have surged to record highs, job losses in
the first three months of this year have neared the staggering
quarter-million mark and financial companies have racked up
billions of dollars in losses. The once mighty Bear Stearns, the
fifth-largest investment bank in the United States, crashed,
prompting a takeover by JP Morgan in a controversial deal backed
by the Fed.
Worldwide financial losses could
approach $1 trillion (Š630 billion) over two years, the IMF said
earlier this week.
Given the significant short-term
downside risks, we are taking action,” Paulson said of the G7’s
decision to adopt the plan. There may be more bumps in the
road,” he warned.
The G7 officials were meeting at
a time when the value of the U.S. dollar was hitting record lows
against the euro and has fallen sharply against Japan’s yen.
There have been at times sharp
fluctuations in major currencies, and we are concerned about
their possible implications for economic and financial
stability,” the G7 statement said, in a departure from previous
language. The members pledged to closely monitor the situation
and cooperate as appropriate.”
The change in the wording on
currencies was pushed by European officials whose own
manufacturing companies are complaining loudly that the falling
dollar is giving American producers a competitive advantage in
their markets.
French Finance Minister
Christine Lagarde said the true test” of the change in the
currency language would come when currency markets open for
trading.
The Financial Stability Forum, a
group that includes central bankers and major financial
regulators from around the world, developed the plan adopted by
the G7. The forum is headed by Mario Draghi, chief of Italy’s
central bank, who presented his group’s findings to the other G7
officials during their closed-door meeting.
The plan is designed to make
financial markets less secretive and improve supervision, which
in theory would help prevent a repeat of the current financial
debacles.
It calls for strengthening
oversight to make sure financial companies have sufficient
capital, cash and risk-management practices to handle problems.
It also would bolster transparency and the valuation of complex
investment products, improve the operation of credit-rating
agencies, strengthen authorities’ responsiveness to risks and
put in place arrangements to deal with stress in the financial
system.
One recommendation is to have
banks, securities firms and other financial institutions
disclose their holdings of risky securities, such as those
backed by subprime mortgages given to people with tarnished
credit. Those subprime mortgages, which soured with the collapse
of the U.S. housing market, were at the heart of the U.S.
crisis.
Another involves having credit
rating agencies distinguish the ratings they give for regular
securities, such as corporate bonds, from those they assign to
more complex investments. - AP |