Yahoo – AFP,
Martin Parry, 20 Sep 2014
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Delegates
prepare to hear the opening remarks at the G20 Finance Ministers and Central
Bank Governors Meeting in Cairns on September 20, 2014 (AFP Photo/William West)
|
Cairns
(Australia) (AFP) - Finance chiefs from G20 nations held talks Saturday,
confident they can "change the destiny of the global economy" despite
rising world political tensions and mounting fears of financial instability.
The meeting
in Cairns aims to thrash out a set of policies to achieve the ambitious goal of
raising the total GDP of the 20 major world economies by two percent over the
next five years, a target they set in Sydney in February.
Finance
ministers and central bank governors, including US Federal Reserve chairwoman
Janet Yellen, want to be able to take their plan to the G20 leaders' summit in
Brisbane in November.
A
high-level G20 source said of Saturday's discussions: "There was no longer
talk about growth versus austerity. Now it is all about how we can grow our
economies.
"What
we found is that extremely good progress has been made towards the two percent
objective," he added. "Everyone supports that agenda."
The source
acknowledged that the "global picture" of economic growth was "very
uneven", but added that all members of the Group of 20 "will continue
to sustain their efforts" to reach the target.
Australian
Treasurer Joe Hockey, who is chairing the meeting, said as he opened the summit
that he was buoyed by the more than 900 submissions that had been made by
participating countries to meet the goal.
These
involve reforms to accelerate infrastructure investment, steps to strengthen
financial reform and the opening of economies to free trade.
"We
are determined to make the world a better place -- to grow the global economy,
to create more and better paying jobs, to build the infrastructure to ensure
children get better quality water, education and healthcare," he said.
"I
have no doubt that as a result of the deliberations of this meeting this
weekend, followed by the leaders' summit in Brisbane in November, that we have
the opportunity to change the destiny of the global economy."
Despite the
upbeat comments, with the OECD downgrading its world growth forecasts this week
amid a stalling eurozone recovery and weakening emerging economies, the task
has become more complicated.
There is
also mounting concern about the impact on emerging economies of the US Federal
Reserve's shift towards tightening its monetary policy next year, while
political tensions in Ukraine and the Middle East have spooked some investors.
Hockey
added that there is a consensus that Russia should attend the leaders' summit
in November, despite alarm over Moscow's actions in Ukraine.
"We've
consulted with a number of countries and the emphatic view came back that of
course we expect Russia to attend the G20," he said.
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Head of the
IMF Christine Lagarde (R) listens to the opening remarks at the G20
Finance
Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting in Cairns on September 20,
2014
(AFP Photo/William West)
|
"They
are a member of the G20 and we expect that they would attend the G20 meetings."
A Russian
delegation is in Cairns, led by deputy finance minister Sergei Storchak.
Spotlight
on tax avoidance
Capital
Economics senior global economist Andrew Kenningham said he was not expecting
any fireworks from Cairns.
"Few
analysts will be waking up early this weekend to read the communique," he
said.
"It is
likely to cover a lot of familiar ground. No doubt it will be full of good
intentions -– but the key question is how much will be implemented."
But he
added that "the G20 focus on promoting growth makes a lot of sense".
OECD
secretary-general Angel Gurria said difficult reforms to drive economic
activity were more essential now than ever with global growth struggling.
"Why
would you reduce the ambition when precisely what you need is the growth,"
he told The Australian newspaper.
"Why
do you think some countries are doing better now? It's because they did the
structural changes. They went in earlier and now it is starting to produce a
benefit."
While
economic growth is a key focus of the summit, G20 nations are also expected to
show progress on a common reporting standard to stop multinational companies
from shifting profits to avoid tax.
The OECD
put forward proposals this week and handed them to the G20 on Saturday, with
Gurria calling them the biggest changes to international tax rules in more than
a century.
The plan
seeks to close international loopholes used by multinational firms, including
digital giants such as Apple and Google, to avoid paying large amounts of tax,
which is costing countries billions of dollars.
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