Jakarta Globe – AFP, Nov 16, 2014
Brisbane. G20 leaders representing the bulk of the world’s economy on Sunday committed to reform measures to lift their collective growth by an extra 2.1 percent by 2018, despite evidence of a slowdown in some major nations.
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| Australia's Prime Minister Tony Abbott, left, and US President Barack Obama each hold a koala before the G20 Leaders' Summit in Brisbane on Nov. 15, 2014. (Reuters Photo/G20 Australia/Handout) |
Brisbane. G20 leaders representing the bulk of the world’s economy on Sunday committed to reform measures to lift their collective growth by an extra 2.1 percent by 2018, despite evidence of a slowdown in some major nations.
The pledge
— known as the Brisbane Action Plan — will push their combined growth beyond
the two percent they were initially targeting in the drive to rehabilitate
sluggish global economies and generate jobs.
“This will
add more than $2 trillion to the global economy and create millions of jobs,”
leaders including US President Barack Obama and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping
said in a summit declaration after weekend talks in Australia.
The communique
also agreed to a global initiative to help address a $70 trillion gap in
infrastructure needed by 2030 to improve productivity, by cutting red tape and
matching private investment with capital projects.
A hub to
coordinate the G20′s work on infrastructure by bringing together governments,
the private sector, multinational development banks and other international
organisations will be headquartered in Sydney.
The world’s
most powerful industrial economies also backed a global crackdown on tax avoidance
by multinational companies.
“The
benefits of that growth will be felt worldwide, not just in G20 member
nations,” Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, the G20 host, said of the 2.1
percent target.
“The
Brisbane Action Plan and individual country growth strategies and employment
plans have been made public so people around the world can see our commitments,
hold us to account and witness our progress.”
On Saturday
in Brisbane, President Barack Obama said the United States cannot “carry the
world economy” and that other G20 nations must do more to spur growth and
create jobs.
Buoyed by
unemployment at its lowest level since July 2008, the US economy is motoring at
a time when other parts of the global engine room, notably Europe and Japan,
are starting to splutter.
“So here in
Brisbane the G20 has a responsibility to act, to boost demand and invest more
in infrastructure and create good jobs for the people of all our nations,” said
the US president.
Australian
Treasurer Joe Hockey said moving even further beyond the two percent target
would be possible if EU leaders start pumping billions of dollars into the
stalling eurozone economy, where Germany and France have only narrowly escaped
recession.
New
European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker has previously outlined a reform
agenda, including a 300 billion euro investment package to boost growth,
employment and competitiveness. Exact details have yet to be presented.
A
commendable effort
In a report
ahead of the G20 summit, the International Monetary Fund said the world economy
faced stiff headwinds from sluggish growth in Europe and Japan and a slowdown
in emerging economies.
It trimmed
its global growth forecast for the year to 3.3 percent, from 3.4 percent,
citing geopolitical tensions and volatility in financial markets.
IMF chief
Christine Lagarde said the G20 this year had been “very productive.”
“Decisive
policy action by all is key to making growth strong, sustainable, balanced and
inclusive, and to create needed jobs,” she said in a statement after the
Brisbane summit.
“I strongly
welcome the determination of G20 members to implement growth strategies that we
calculate would lift their collective GDP by at least 2.1 percent by 2018.
“This is a
commendable effort, with significant benefits for the global economy.
Implementation is now critical, with a strong accountability framework to
monitor progress, supported by the IMF.”
Host
Australia has worked hard to keep the G20 focus this year on economic matters,
including cracking down on global tax avoidance.
The leaders
pledged to keep working to strengthen financial institutions, protect taxpayers
from having to fund bailouts of “too big to fail” banks while addressing shadow
banking risks.
“These
important reforms mean the global financial system is far more resilient than
it was at the time of the crisis,” their summit declaration said.

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