The formula is "G7 plus". In announcing the summit, US President George Bush said that the summit would bring together members of the
G20. The G20 was set up to respond to the
financial turmoil of 1997-99 through the development of policies that "promote international financial stability". The G20 comprises countries considered to be systemically important, but omits over 170 governments (192 governments are members of the
United Nations). The first meeting of the G20 leaders on financial markets and the world economy was held in Washington, D.C. on November 14–15, 2008, at the
National Building Museum. The participants were:
Argentina, Australia,
Brazil, Canada, the
People's Republic of China, France, Germany, India,
Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico,
Republic of Korea, Russia,
Saudi Arabia, South Africa,
Turkey, the United Kingdom, the
United States of America, the
European Union (represented by France's President
Nicolas Sarkozy as
President of the European Council, as well as by
José Manuel Barroso, president of the
European Commission), the Netherlands (allowed extraordinary presence), Spain (allowed extraordinary presence), the
World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund and the
Financial Stability Forum. Although Dutch Prime Minister
Jan Peter Balkenende arrived at Andrews Air Force Base on the evening of November 14, he immediately returned to the Netherlands when notified of the death of his father; the Netherlands was instead represented by
State Secretary Jan Kees de Jager. Spanish Prime Minister
José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero was not initially invited, but was "so desperate to secure an invitation" to the summit, that he traveled "to Asia to seek the help of President
Hu Jintao of China." Zapatero eventually extracted an invitation through "intense lobbying" of French President
Nicolas Sarkozy, who happened to hold two invitations (the second French invitation was due to the fact that France held the
Presidency of the Council of the European Union during this period).
Core participants The following participants of the Washington summit include the core members of the G20, which comprises 19 countries and the
European Union which is represented by its two governing bodies, the
European Council and the
European Commission, as well as other nations and regional organizations invited to take part.
Suggestions German Chancellor
Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy said "Bretton Woods II" should bring about "genuine, all-encompassing reform of the international financial system". The
Council of the European Union sees the meeting as "tak[ing] early decisions on transparency, global standards of regulation, cross-border supervision and crisis management, to avoid conflicts of interest and to create an early warning system, so as to engender confidence among savers and investors in every country." In announcing the meeting, the spokesperson for US President George Bush said that "leaders will review progress being made to address the current financial crisis, advance a common understanding of its causes, and, in order to avoid a repetition, agree on a common set of principles for reform of the regulatory and institutional regimes for the world's financial sector". UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, in a mid-October speech, set out several principles. These include transparency (internationally agreed
accounting standards,
credit insurance market standards), integrity (
credit agencies,
executive pay), responsibility (board member competency and expertise), sound banking practice (protecting against
speculative bubbles). While addressing the G20 leaders,
Chinese leader Hu Jintao listed four priorities in reforming the
international financial system: stepping up international cooperation in
financial regulation; advancing reform of international financial institutions; encouraging regional financial cooperation; and improving the international currency system. Foreign ministry spokesman
Qin Gang said the agreement was "comprehensive, positive and balanced". Prior to this summit,
Japan's Prime Minister,
Taro Aso, had contributed feasible action plan based on the analysis of the surplus of Japan's international balance of payments in spite of her prolonged economic slump to
The Wall Street Journal, and also provided his idea includes funding in the meeting. Eventually Japan provided the
International Monetary Fund 100 billion
U.S. dollar to bolster the fund during the
2008 financial crisis.
Key achievements The
White House reported that the summit had reached what would be the
Washington declaration. The five key objectives the leaders agreed upon were: • reached a common understanding of the root causes of the global crisis; • reviewed actions countries had taken and would take in the future to address the immediate crisis and strengthen growth; • agreed on common principles for reforming their financial markets; • launched an action plan to implement those principles and asked ministers to develop further specific recommendations that would be reviewed by leaders at a subsequent summit; and • reaffirmed their commitment to
free market principles. A summary of the meeting's other salient points is presented by the
White House in the "Fact Sheet" Despite the optimism expressed by many of those present, doubts soon began to emerge about the success of the meeting and the chances of achieving all its objectives. The 2009 G20 management troika (U.K., Brazil,
South Korea) is charged with coordinating the task of coming up with the content and method of implementing the 47 short and mid-term objectives by March 2009. Follow-up Summit meetings were held on April 2, 2009 in London, and in September 2009 in Pittsburgh.
Reactions From participating delegations • –
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva welcomed the summit's decision to give a role to the emerging economic powers like Brazil, Mexico, Russia, China and India in restructuring the global economy. • –
Chinese President and
CCP General Secretary Hu Jintao listed four priorities in reforming the international financial system: stepping up international cooperation in financial regulation; advancing reform of international financial institutions; encouraging regional financial cooperation; and improving the international currency system. • –
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that the stalled
Doha round of global trade talks should be pushed forward so that a basic agreement could be reached before President Bush leaves office in January. He also added that the summit was "a clear indication that the balance of power is shifting in favour of emerging economies". • –
Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso spoke about the impact on the poorer countries if nothing is done, how to avoid it, and how to help them. 12 out of 15 plans written by Aso (Based on so called Aso-plan, sent to New York Times) ended up on the final agreement. Including Japan funding
IMF with 100 billion dollars. This had led other countries to put in larger sums of funds, thus stabilizing the safety net for the countries in need financially. This is believed to have stopped the total collapse of world economy from the
2008 financial crisis. • –
President of South Korea Lee Myung-bak said "G20 nations must lead the way for the stalled WTO Doha Agreement to be concluded as soon as possible" And He made keynote speech at G20 summit that G20 countries make a "Stand-Still" declaration on trade and investment restrictions. • – British Prime Minister Gordon Brown spoke at a press conference: "These are extraordinary times and they require extraordinary measures." "If my sense of last night is right, at a next meeting, plans for the detailed reform of international institutions will be brought forward", he said after the meeting. • – President of the United States George W. Bush said: "We are adapting our financial systems to the realities of the 21st century". VOA reported that after the summit Bush stated: "Our nations agreed that we must make the financial markets more transparent and accountable. Transparency is very important so that investors and regulators are able to know the truth." • –
President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso was pleased with the outcome of the summit: 'I can really say that this was a historic summit. I am very, very happy.' He added that no one had expected a miracle solution, emphasising that there was now a 'clear time schedule' for reforming the world financial system. 'This is the beginning of a process, not the end,' he explained.
From the press The financial press generally welcomed the results of the summit but the
Financial Times drew attention to the need for real global cooperation on the ambitious agenda while
The Wall Street Journal questioned whether the "regulatory crackdown on the kind of high-risk lending and investment that has led the world into a financial mess" might not backfire by causing an unwanted credit crunch.
Business Week listed a number of difficult fundamental questions finance ministers would now have to resolve by the end of March. These included trade tensions and protectionism,
consumer spending, housing prices, a clampdown on lending practices and how to achieve global coordination.
The Hindu's
Business Line opined that "it is all very well to speak blithely of new Bretton Woods institutions but, when there is no acceptance of a world mediated by Western ideas, the move is doomed ab initio." ==Similar efforts==