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Demands
for more stimulus fell by the wayside as concern over sovereign defaults and
budget deficits caught the attention of G20 participants. Reading between the
lines, it seems Europe politely told Geithner to go to hell.
G-20 Officials Had Heated Debate on Europe
South Korea's deputy finance ministers says G-20 Officials Had
Heated Debate on Europe
There’s
been “a lot of heat” in the discussions, Shin Je Yoon, deputy
minister for international affairs at South Korea’s finance ministry, told
reporters in Busan today during a break in a meeting of G-20 officials.
Shin said the European crisis was the dominant issue discussed by G-20
officials, with mixed views about the possibility of the region’s
sovereign-debt woes spreading to other parts of the world.
Hot
Air From Geithner on the Yuan
Geithner Says G-20 Discussed More
Flexible China Yuan Policy
Finance
officials from the Group of 20 nations discussed how a shift towards a higher
U.S. savings rate can be complemented by a “more flexible exchange rate
policy” in China as well as stronger domestic demand in Japan and
Europe, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said today after a meeting in
Busan, South Korea.
That
discussion was totally useless. China will do what it wants when it wants
until the market (not hot air from Washington) forces China's hand.
G20 Drops Support For Fiscal Stimulus
The Financial Times reports G20 drops support
for fiscal stimulus.
Finance
ministers from the world’s leading economies ripped up their support
for fiscal stimulus on Saturday, recognising that financial market concerns
over sovereign debt had forced a much greater focus on deficit reduction.
The meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bank governors
in Busan, South Korea, also dropped proposals for a global banking levy,
instead giving countries leeway to do what they thought best for their
domestic circumstances.
The communiqué of the meeting made it clear that the G20 no longer
thought that expansionary fiscal policy was sustainable or effective in
fostering an economic recovery because investors were no longer confident
about some countries’ public finances. “The recent events
highlight the importance of sustainable public finances and the need for our
countries to put in place credible, growth-friendly measures, to deliver
fiscal sustainability,” the communiqué stated.
“Those countries with serious fiscal challenges need to accelerate the
pace of consolidation,” it added. “We welcome the recent
announcements by some countries to reduce their deficits in 2010 and
strengthen their fiscal frameworks and institutions”.
These words were in marked contrast to the G20’s previous
communiqué from late April, which called for fiscal support to
“be maintained until the recovery is firmly driven by the private
sector and becomes more entrenched”.
Many other finance ministers accepted market realities had changed the
G20’s policy, Christine Lagarde, French finance minister, said: “There’s a large majority for whom
redressing the public finances is priority number one. For a minority,
it’s supporting growth”.
The
Minority Speaks
Speaking for the minority, Geithner Tells G-20
Reliance on U.S. Will Curb Growth.
Treasury
Secretary Timothy Geithner told his Group of 20 counterparts that the pace of
the global recovery depends on domestic demand in Japan and Europe, and
countries shouldn’t rely on spending by U.S. consumers.
“The necessary shift towards higher savings in the United States needs
to be complemented by stronger domestic demand growth in Japan and in the
European surplus countries, and sustained growth in private demand” and
end to the yuan peg in China, Geithner wrote in a letter before a two-day
G-20 meeting in Busan, South Korea that ended today.
Geithner’s remarks underscore signs of differences over how quickly to
rein in public spending, with the Treasury chief warning that fiscal
tightening won’t “succeed unless we are able to strengthen
confidence in the global recovery.” French Finance Minister Christine
Lagarde said yesterday that budget consolidation is “priority No.
1” for most G-20 members.
European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet told reporters that
Europe’s best contribution to the global rebound is to achieve fiscal
sustainability.
There’s been “a lot heat, a lot of heat,” in the G-20
talks, Shin Je-Yoon, deputy minister for international affairs at South
Korea’s finance ministry, told reporters today.
“I continue to say that I see good news from the current euro-dollar
rate,” French Prime Minister Francois Fillon told reporters yesterday
in Paris. President Nicolas Sarkozy “and I have been saying for years
that the euro-dollar rate didn’t reflect reality and was penalizing our
exports,” he said.
Wanting The
Impossible
French President Nicolas Sarkozy comments on the Euro highlights the
impossible task of making everyone happy. The US, EU, UK, Japan, and China
all want a weaker currency. It cannot be done.
Nothing But Hot Air
The G-20 meeting was useless. The market had already forced Europe's hand
with the action in credit defaults spreads in Greece, Portugal, and Spain as
compared to Germany.
The same thing happened in the UK when Gordon Brown was tossed out of office.
US, Japan, China Day of Reckoning is Coming
Trichet's comment that the best contribution to the global rebound is to
achieve fiscal sustainability is certainly accurate. Unfortunately, that
comment will fall on deaf ears as Geithner, Bernanke, and the Obama
Administration clowns are completely clueless.
At some point, the market will get extremely tough with the US, China, and
Japan in regards to deficit spending, interest rates, currency pegs, and
financing debt. However, there is no telling exactly when those days of
reckoning will come or in what order they happen.
Kiss the Illusion Goodbye
With global stimulus efforts playing second fiddle to default concerns, a
double-dip recession is just around the corner. Please see Hungary Tries To
Calm Markets; Europe Headed Back in Recession, US Will Not Decouple for
further discussion.
The Keynesian clowns will be howling that reduced stimulus killed the
recovery. However, the reality is there was no recovery in the first place,
only an illusion caused by unsustainable stimulus.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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Thoughts
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