World leaders at economic summit vow to cooperate

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JENNIFER LOVEN | November 15, 2008 11:50 PM EST | AP

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President George W. Bush walks away from the podium after speaking about the Summit on Financial Markets and the World Economy in Washington, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008 (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

WASHINGTON — World leaders battling a dire and deepening economic crisis vowed Saturday to cooperate more closely, keep a sharper eye out for red-flag problems and give bigger roles to fast-rising nations _ but kicked many hard details down the road for their next summit after President-elect Barack Obama takes office.

Perhaps as important as the modest concrete steps they took, the leaders of the planet's richest nations _ and some of the fastest-developing _ made clear their recognition of the world's increasingly interconnected financial architecture and the responsibilities that go along with it.

"There shall be no blind spots," German Chancellor Angela Merkel declared. "There is here a great common will to ensure that such a crisis is not repeated."

Underscoring how bad things have gotten this time, President George W. Bush, the summit host, said he had agreed to the recent $700 billion rescue plan for U.S. financial institutions only after being told the nation was at risk of falling into "a depression greater than the Great Depression."

Also significant at the summit: the inclusion of a far broader range of countries than the elite, old-guard group that usually holds such summit meetings.

"Emerging market countries were not the cause of this crisis, but they are amongst its worst affected victims," declared Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Leaders from 21 nations and four international organizations attended the emergency summit that was held as Washington was blanketed in a gray mist and which took on a workaday feel appropriate to the grim crisis that drew them together. At the conclusion of talks that took place over two days, they released a joint communique that was modest in scope but high in hopes.

Covering eight pages and 47 action items, the document's overarching focus is to establish a series of new safeguards for the fragile and opaque global financial system. Nearly all the efforts are aimed in some way at better flagging risky investment patterns and regulatory weak spots before they bring down companies and then ripple dangerously through entire economies, as has happened in recent months.

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To that end, the leaders called for such mundane things as "supervisory colleges" where financial regulators can compare market notes across countries, better cooperation between nations on regulations, the eventual standardization of accounting rules governing how companies can value potentially tricky assets, and new attention to credit-rating agencies.

The leaders also supported expanding the membership of the Financial Stability Forum, a group that has been examining the causes of the financial crisis and crafting ways to prevent future problems. And the group called for broadening the financial police work of the 63-year-old International Monetary Fund as well as modernizing the institution to better keep pace with the changing economic environment.

None of the items was splashy, and most would be understandable to few outside of financial experts, but officials argued they have far-reaching potential.

"It's not glamour," said French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

More than two dozen items were slated for some level of action by the end of March, around the time the leaders expect to gather again, with the rest left for later. Concrete proposals were few, however, with most details slated to be worked out by finance ministers in the coming months and beyond.

The leaders also discussed the shorter-term problem of how to bring their nations' economies back from the brink. Some had pushed ahead of time for a pledge of coordinated new government stimulus spending by each nation.

But with Bush cool to such action in the U.S., the communique only endorsed taking such action "as appropriate."

A handful of the hundreds of protesters that flocked to the U.S. capital city succinctly summed up skepticism about their benefit to the families around the world who are increasingly worried about mortgages, retirement savings and jobs. "Money for people's needs, not bankers' greed," said their bright yellow signs.

The talks were undoubtedly remarkable, however, for drawing together such a vast number and array of nations and bringing them to agreement on a set of actions, however limited, in less than a month's time. Leaders from major powers including Britain, Germany, France and Japan were there, alongside rulers from developing countries such as China, India, Brazil and South Korea as well as from the oil-rich Gulf state of Saudi Arabia. The summit was just announced on Oct. 22, and the urgency of the downward-spiraling global economic situation led to much faster action than is typical in the usually glacial diplomatic arena.

With fears high that signs of discord among the world's most powerful politicians could send markets plunging again come Monday, the presidents and prime ministers appeared uncharacteristically determined to hold their tongues about any disagreement over either the cause of the current crisis or their compromise agreement. This despite the fact that the action plan seemed to lean in most areas far more toward the U.S. preference for boosting oversight and free-market incentives than the European desire for increased regulation and requirements.

Sarkozy, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso emerged with praise for the meeting as a sign of historic cooperation.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said after the summit that "despite the great diversity of countries in the room for those two days of the summit, there was a practically unanimous agreement on all major topics."

Bush, though, is on his way out of office and the leaders were clearly looking beyond him to his successor. Many met on the sidelines of the summit with Obama's surrogates, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former Republican Rep. Jim Leach of Iowa, while speculating about whether the Democratic president-elect might veer from Bush's approach by the time of the next summit.

"The president-elect believes that the G-20 summit of leaders from the world's largest economies is an important opportunity to seek a coordinated response to the global financial crisis," Albright and Leach said in a statement late Saturday. "There is one president at a time, so the president-elect asked us to represent him in receiving the views of these important partners. We also conveyed President-elect Obama's determination to continuing to work together on these challenges after he takes office in January."

Still, Bush made sure he kept an iron grip on the proceedings. His was the only voice heard in any official setting _ during the toast at Friday's dinner and before and after the closed summit meetings. All the other leaders had to scramble to set up briefings or news conferences at alternative sites in order to express their thoughts.

The inclusion of the developing nations was demanded by Bush, in part in hopes they would act as a brake on European desires for tough new regulations of financial firms or products. But the decision also was hailed as necessary to the effectiveness of such a meeting, because the financial crisis that began in the U.S. had spread to the poorer nations.

Indeed, one goal of the meeting was to boost the effort to help such struggling nations weather the financial crisis largely caused by their bigger, more developed counterparts. Japan's prime minister, Taro Aso, urged China and others to contribute to the International Monetary Fund's $250 billion bailout pool, aimed mostly at poorer countries. Japan on Friday said it was ready to put in as much as $100 billion.

Talk of blame was kept to a minimum, though many still hold the belief that the primary fault for the cascade of ruinous events lies with the U.S., where it has become the norm to offer easy credit, outsized rewards for high-risk investing, and lax oversight to the whole process.

___

Associated Press writers Jeannine Aversa, Martin Crutsinger, Emma Vandore, Michael Fischer, David Stringer and Deb Riechmann contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

White House: http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/financialmarkets/index.html

WASHINGTON — World leaders battling a dire and deepening economic crisis vowed Saturday to cooperate more closely, keep a sharper eye out for red-flag problems and give bigger roles to fast-risi...
WASHINGTON — World leaders battling a dire and deepening economic crisis vowed Saturday to cooperate more closely, keep a sharper eye out for red-flag problems and give bigger roles to fast-risi...
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- Manx I'm a Fan of Manx 25 fans permalink

Inasmuch as they're meeting to discuss the world's financial crisis, I'm sure the dinner will be a modest one. However, the table setting looks a bit elaborate for tuna casserole.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 AM on 11/15/2008
- GrkAm I'm a Fan of GrkAm 21 fans permalink
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LOL!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 AM on 11/15/2008
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They must have all read "The Secret". By dining on the finest food they are focusing on what they want (prosperity for all) rather than bringing in gloomy negative thoughts of scarcity which, by the Law of Attraction, would just lead to worse suffering around the globe.

I'm tearing up here thinking about how much they care about us all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 AM on 11/15/2008

FOR PETE SAKES PEOPLE, THESE LEADERS SHOULDNT EAT BURGEN KING AND FANTA JUST BECAUSE THERE IS A CRISIS AT HAND AND THAT BY DINNING LIKE THE LEADERS THEY ARE SHOULD OFFEND SOME PEOPLE... TAKE A CHILL-PILL, WE'LL BE FINE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 AM on 11/15/2008

Burgen King?

Dinning?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 AM on 11/15/2008
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"loco10" .... yeah, I agree. loco is an accurate designation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 AM on 11/15/2008
- fignozzle I'm a Fan of fignozzle 15 fans permalink
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i am scared to read this story.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 AM on 11/15/2008
- max I'm a Fan of max 13 fans permalink
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pass the brains to W

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 AM on 11/15/2008

Somewhere someone has finally plunged a silver stake into the heart of Uncle Milty Friedman's School of Vapor Currency Economics. The US financial system is now officially the laughing stock of the planet. Invest in used denim, it is the feedstock for new dollar bills.

Never since the founding of the East India Company have we watched a prosperous nation fritter away its independence. But then, it was a great run from 1945 to present, unless Silly-Con Valley a new speculative bubble...Dream on!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 AM on 11/15/2008
- Texas4Obama I'm a Fan of Texas4Obama 108 fans permalink
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There has been an awful lot of criticism regarding the food at the dinner.
You can not invite world leaders to the White House and then serve hamburgers, fried chicken, or stew.
The day that the White House starts skimping on state dinners will be the day that the world leaders will lose confidence in the U.S.A. White House state dinners are not given every week and I think the expense is well worth it if it promotes good relations with other countries.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 AM on 11/15/2008
- pmag88 I'm a Fan of pmag88 15 fans permalink

Texas chilli and three bean soup washed down with plenty of Old Milwaukee. (they brew it after cleaning the vats so it has plenty of extra soap)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 AM on 11/15/2008
- duze I'm a Fan of duze 25 fans permalink

When will these guys have consequences to face. If they don't why should they stop. Too much is at stake for the country to look the other way on this. When hard working people don't have jobs, homes,credit and live in abandoned buildings, and these guys make and take home millions of $ something is terribly wrong, and it's time somethint concrete was done about it. A common thief has more consequences and yet these guys can always make an excuse and get away with it. This sends
a bad message to the rest of the world, it undermines everything were trying to teach our children.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 AM on 11/15/2008

Maybe someone will read Luke Chapter 16 to them. You know, the story of the rich man and the beggar.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 AM on 11/15/2008
- PT6 I'm a Fan of PT6 25 fans permalink

Too Bad they have to deal with the SOURCE of the CRISIS instead of the CURE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 AM on 11/15/2008
- LMPE I'm a Fan of LMPE 86 fans permalink
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Some of the footage that I saw of the summit showed Bush meeting Saudi King Abdullah, and it looked as though George kissed the guy. George's fundamentalist Christian backers aren't going to like that GWB kissed an Arab: not only did it look gay, but he did it with a MUSLIM. I guess that when they voted for Shrub, they forgot that he would have to meet people from other countries. Of course, no matter how much one explains to these Bible-thumping nuts that the Bush family has done business with the Saudi royal for years, they won't believe it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 AM on 11/15/2008
- donaldw6 I'm a Fan of donaldw6 357 fans permalink
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Leader1: Another quail, perhaps?
Leader2: Yes, thanks awfully. Have you tried the quinoa risotto? It's superb.
Leader1: Sublime. Cabernet?
Leader2: But of course.
Leader1: Bad luck for the lower classes right now, what?
Leader2: Yes. Tragic, really. Fondue?
Leader1: Couldn't eat another bite, my good fellow. Perhaps a bit of Chandon Etoile Rose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 AM on 11/15/2008
- Chaucea I'm a Fan of Chaucea 8 fans permalink
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Paul Krugman on MSNBC earlier today quipped that the most these world leaders would get out of the meeting was the quail and the cabernet. ;-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 AM on 11/15/2008

Hey that is a really nice way to say that by tomorrow everything that they took away from the meeting will be sh*t.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 AM on 11/15/2008
- donaldw6 I'm a Fan of donaldw6 357 fans permalink
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I can't think of anything to say about them that would escape the HP cen-sors.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 AM on 11/15/2008
- Tinsdale I'm a Fan of Tinsdale 24 fans permalink

My question is: " Where are the "SneezeGuards"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 PM on 11/15/2008
- yorkie I'm a Fan of yorkie 5 fans permalink
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NICE TO SEE THE LONG TABLE USED FOR FORMAL DINNER,,,,, I 'M TIRED OF ALL THOSE SMALL ROUND TABLES JAMMING THE ROOMS in formal dinner settings ! I hope something real gets done asap! We need to change law and speed up time of transition by a month or so ! MAYBE CHINA and INDIA could help by simply forgiving the US of any debts it has ! We need to deal not only with the financial mess but military tensions as well...... WE NEED new strong peace agreements to be able to end hostilities in IRAQ, AFGHAN, GEORGIA, many nations in AFRICA, MIDEAST,,,,, etc....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 AM on 11/15/2008

As to the long table. The State Dining Room in the White House is so small that, if a long table is used, only 60 guests may be invited.

Using small tables, seating 10 each, 150 can be accomodated in the space.

That was why Jackie was the first First Lady to use them.

Also has to do with promoting conversation. At a long table, one's conversation is limited to the person on either side of one.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 AM on 11/15/2008
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