World leaders meet to brainstorm financial crisis-Washington

Posted on November 15th, 2008 by Mindy Yong.
Categories: World News.

World leaders meet to brainstorm financial crisis-Washington

Bush stops short of far-reaching oversight that Europeans want

(Washington)

WITH economic damage piling ever higher, US President George W Bush and other world leaders are gathering to explore options for relief and to work on ways to prevent similar credit and financial calamities from happening again.

It’s a tall order, but Mr Bush is hopeful that some common ground for action can be found at the extraordinary summit, which began with a dinner yesterday, followed by closed-door deliberations today.

Ahead of the summit, Mr Bush warned his counterparts on Thursday not to crush the global economy under a raft of strict new financial regulations.

‘We must recognise that government intervention is not a cure-all,’ Mr Bush said. ‘Our aim should not be more government. It should be smarter government.’ Mr Bush put forward his own prescription, which includes bolstering accounting rules, reviewing anti-fraud provisions for trading in stocks and other securities, and improving regulatory coordination among countries. But he stopped short of the more far-reaching oversight and regulation that Europeans leaders want.

‘We want to change the rules of the game in the financial world,’ said French President Nicolas Sarkozy prior to the gathering.

The Europeans want to close loopholes that allow some financial institutions to evade regulation and ensure supervision for all major financial players, including credit ratings agencies or funds carrying high amounts of debt.

‘There is a need for urgency,’ said British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who is seeking a new network of global regulators who would scrutinise the world’s largest financial institutions.

Europeans also are advocating an early warning system that would watch for financial bubbles like the one that enveloped the US housing market.

The housing bubble eventually burst and created the mess that the world leaders are now trying to clean up. They also want a pledge for concrete changes in just 100 days.

Critics blamed lax oversight and failures by regulators in the US and elsewhere to detect problems as one of the prime reasons behind the financial crisis.

The crisis, which erupted in the US around August of last year as mortgage investments soured with the housing market’s collapse, quickly spread to other countries.

Banks and other financial companies suffered huge losses and foreclosures skyrocketed. Troubles then snowballed to other areas, crimping car and student loans and locking up lending for many consumers and businesses worldwide.

All the fallout has pushed the global economy to the brink of recession. Unemployment in the US bolted to 6.5 per cent in October, a 14-year high.

Still, Mr Bush put up a stout defence of capitalism. ‘It is true that this crisis included failures, by lenders and borrowers, by financial firms, by governments and independent regulators,’ he said.

‘But the crisis was not a failure of the free market system. And the answer is not to try to reinvent that system.’

Besides the US, France, Britain and other big industrial powers, the summit also will include leaders from developing economic powers such as Russia, China, Brazil and India. — AP

Source : Straits Times - 15 Nov 2008

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