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G20 Meeting: What Issues World Leaders Will Be Fighting For

By The Associated Press   06/24/10 04:04 AM ET   AP

Geithner

Leaders of the world's major industrial countries, representing 85 percent of the global economy, will meet in Canada starting Friday for economic summits of the Group of Eight and G-20 nations. A look at selected countries and their leaders:

UNITED STATES

President Barack Obama has endured a rough two months, struggling to come to grips with the nation's worst oil spill. But White House officials contend the president is coming into the G-20 summit from a position of strength, with an economic recovery in the United States starting to gain traction. They said pending financial overhaul legislation in Congress gives Obama a strong bargaining position in his talks with other G-20 leaders. Obama wrote a letter to his G-20 colleagues last week urging them not to waver in their coordinated response to the global financial crisis. But many countries, worried about exploding government deficits, are resisting his calls for sustained stimulus spending. At home, Obama is having trouble getting a scaled-down jobs bill through Congress.

CANADA

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the host for the summit, is urging G-20 leaders to cut their budget deficits in half by 2013. That's a tougher approach than the one being pushed by Obama, who is continuing to urge that countries avoid the mistakes of the 1930s, when stimulus was withdrawn too quickly. Harper has come under criticism over the projected costs of the three-day summit, including $1 billion for security and $2 million to construct a fake indoor lake in the media center. In addition to getting G-20 commitments on deficit reduction targets, Canada is continuing to oppose a bank tax, arguing such a tax would not be fair to Canada, which avoided bank failures during the financial crisis. Harper has made maternal and children's health care top foreign-aid initiatives at the talks.

JAPAN

Japan's new prime minister, Naoto Kan, who took office earlier this month, will make his diplomatic debut at the G-8 and G-20 summits. Kan took office after Yukio Hatoyama abruptly quit after just eight months in office, when his approval ratings plunged over his broken campaign promise to move a U.S. airbase off the island of Okinawa. Kan has said "fiscal reconstruction" will be his top agenda item at the Toronto meetings. He said Monday that Japan will soon start debating a possible sales tax increase to rein in the nation's bulging deficits, the product of two decades of government efforts to jump-start the economy. A fiscal hawk and a social progressive, Kan repeated warnings that Japan could face a crisis similar to the one that has crippled Greece if it doesn't move forcefully to deal with its debt problems.

BRITAIN

This will be the first G-20 meeting for British Prime Minister David Cameron, who took office in May after his Conservative Party formed a coalition government that ended 13 years of Labor Party rule. Cameron campaigned on a platform of reducing Britain's huge budget deficits and accused Prime Minister Gordon Brown of underestimating the extent of the debt crisis. Cameron's government unveiled an emergency budget Tuesday that included higher taxes and the toughest cuts in public spending in decades. Cameron has said the measures are needed to reassure international investors worried about a British budget deficit that equals 10.2 percent of the country's economy, a percentage in line with the current U.S. deficit. A Cameron spokesman said Obama and Cameron discussed the BP oil spill in a phone call Tuesday and the two leaders would cover the issue again during a one-on-one meeting Saturday.

FRANCE

While French President Nicolas Sarkozy claimed credit for the role France played in the rescue effort of the euro after the Greek debt crisis hit, the French people are wary of the impending cuts to deal with France's own budget deficit. According to French media reports, Sarkozy complained to aides that "in Greece, they call me a savior, unlike what they call me here." Sarkozy's government has announced a plan to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62 by 2018, provoking outrage in a country where government workers as young as 50 can retire. Sarkozy has joined with Germany in an effort to push for a more ambitious effort on the part of G-20 countries to overhaul what he sees as lax financial regulations that triggered the global financial crisis.

GERMANY

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's popularity is sliding after a shaky first eight months for her new center-right coalition. The government has annoyed Germans with constant public squabbling. In the wake of the European debt crisis, it pushed through an unpopular financial rescue package for Greece and a backup plan for other heavily indebted countries that use the common euro currency. Merkel's government has drawn up a plan to save $98 billion in the German budget through 2014. A recent poll showed that 86 percent of people were dissatisfied with the government's work, the worst showing for any German administration in six years. At the G-20, Merkel will join with Sarkozy to push for greater regulation of financial markets. She would like to see a new tax imposed on banks to help pay the costs of future crises.

ITALY

Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi has seen his popularity hurt by the government austerity measures being taken to deal with Italy's budget problems in the wake of the European debt crisis. He has proposed cuts to Italy's bloated bureaucracy and a crackdown on tax evasion as part of an effort to reduce the government's deficit to under 3 percent of GDP by 2012, an improvement from 5.3 percent in 2009. The measures are being debated in Parliament and some sectors have threatened strikes over proposed cuts of up to 30 percent of their salaries. A general strike has been called for June 25. Berlusconi is two years into a five-year term in alliance with the anti-immigration North League.

RUSSIA

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev enjoys high popularity but his mentor and predecessor, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, remains more popular. Medvedev is still considered largely a caretaker president until Putin decides to reassume power. The next Russian election is in 2012. Russia's economy contracted 7.9 percent last year, the largest drop among the G-8 countries. At the summit, Russia will be interested in efforts to reform the international financial architecture. Medvedev has said he will put forward proposals to reform international auditing standards.

CHINA

Chinese President Hu Jintao delivered the biggest surprise in the run-up to the summit: In the face of intense pressure from the United States and other countries, Beijing agreed to allow its currency to resume rising in value against the dollar. American manufacturers contend that China has manipulated its currency to gain unfair trade advantages. By agreeing to resume allowing the currency to appreciate, Hu removed a contentious issue from the G-20 agenda. China escaped the worst of the global economic crisis by pushing a torrent of bank loans and government spending through the economy. The result was high growth and strong employment but also soaring property prices and fears the lending spree might leave banks with heavy debts. Now there are also worries that Europe's debt crisis will crimp Chinese exports to its biggest foreign market.

BRAZIL

Since the global economic crisis, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has become a leading voice for the developing world and a critic of rich nations. Last week, he called the financial systems of rich nations "rotten." While Brazil's constitution bars him for running for another term, his hand-picked successor is Dilma Rouseff, his former chief of staff. At the moment, she is in a dead heat in the polls with opposition candidate Jose Serra from the Brazilian Social Democratic Party. Silva would like his legacy to be as a developing-world leader who finally forced rich nations to make significant structural changes to the global economic order. He has pushed for changes to give developing countries more voice at multilateral institutions such as the International Monetary Fund.

INDIA

India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh says his billion-plus population needs to see economic growth of 10 percent a year to eradicate chronic poverty. India has bounced back faster than expected from the global financial crisis and had economic growth of 8.6 percent in the January-March quarter, the best in two years. Inflation is a problem, with food inflation stuck in double digits for over a year, forcing many to cut back on what they see as luxury purchases of fruit and meat. The high inflation has become a political issue with opposition politicians, making it difficult for the ruling Congress Party-led coalition to get rid of costly fuel subsidies that strain the budget. Singh is expected to continue his drive to get more of a voice for developing countries at the IMF and World Bank.

___

Associated Press writers Martin Crutsinger in Washington, Rob Gillies in Toronto, Malcolm Foster, Mari Yamiguchi and Shino Yuasa in Tokyo, Jane Wardell in London, Emma Vandore and Christina Okello in Paris, Geir Moulson in Berlin, Colleen Barry in Milan, Gary Peach in Moscow, Charles Hutzler in Beijing, Bradley Brooks in Rio de Janeiro and Erika Kinetz in Mumbai contributed to this report.

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Leaders of the world's major industrial countries, representing 85 percent of the global economy, will meet in Canada starting Friday for economic summits of the Group of Eight and G-20 nations. A loo...
Leaders of the world's major industrial countries, representing 85 percent of the global economy, will meet in Canada starting Friday for economic summits of the Group of Eight and G-20 nations. A loo...
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07:26 PM on 08/07/2010
This administrations top appointments have been to members of one or all of the following tri lateral commish (USA, Europe and Japan). bilderberger group or the council on foreign relations, none of these institutions are Federal. They are private like the Federal Reserve which has no audit or oversight. Ask yourself what events led up to this state of international affairs. Follow the money.
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Azterix
I am what I am.
03:53 AM on 06/27/2010
Why does the term austerity often apply to Europeans countries but not in the U.S.? I usually hear the term spending cuts or budget cuts.
06:06 AM on 06/25/2010
hopefully there will be no violence at this event like at the last one, I just saw that security costs were upwards of $1B.... good
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messy
artist, writer, adventurer
10:14 PM on 06/25/2010
A cop punched a guy in the face, and another took a flag pole from a marcher and broke it over his knee. The march was met by about 600 cops in full riot gear.
06:22 PM on 06/24/2010
Turbo tax Timmy looks like he is about to puke any minute. Check out the Youtube video where Elizabeth Warren grills him. It is priceless. If a man is known by the company he keeps, then Obama , with friends like these....
04:46 PM on 06/24/2010
The biggest issue these so called world leaders face is that they're so gosh darn idiotic. They couldn't come up with an effective policy even if someone was yelling the answer right at them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
01:50 PM on 06/24/2010
This G20 "New World Order" is the absolute embodiment of the Corporate Fascist Rule over biological humans. The rescue of Greece is the equivalent of the USA bailing out Houston, TX and is much ado about nothing.
The reality is that unless and until these Oligarchs are put in their place by the removal of the Corporate Veil making the biological humans behind the sociopathic actions responsible.
I pray the Canadians make these Oligarch's lives HELL when they are there because this is the root of the Corruption, Evil and Rot that's overcome the Earth.
06:24 PM on 06/24/2010
Yes, G20 is nothing but a group of government heads doing the bidding of the plutocrat/kleptocrat class in their countries. Amy Goodman is going to broadcast from Torornto tomorrow about the protests - one of the very few exceptional voices for the peasants.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MetrointheWoods
11:57 AM on 06/24/2010
Personally, I think this will be one of the most interesting G20 Summits in years. It's starting to look like Congress has exceeded its ability to keep extending jobless benefits at a time when most of the G20 begins adopting significant austerity measures, including massive, across the board social assistance cuts.

China's decision to remove the currency peg for the yuan looks like bad window dressing. A housing bubble in Shanghai, striking workers, and an increasingly uncertain currency make China at least appear the least stable it has looked since 1989. If India can go into this summit strong in its push for growth, this can be the turning point where India begins its to overtake China. Yes, it can happen.

Six years from the 2016 Olympics, Brazil is going to have to tone down its criticism of the Developed World and show some positive growth. Without at least a 6% real GDP growth for the next four to five years, the games simply will not happen. Brazil isn't China. It doesn't have the command and control economy to pull this off. And while Da Silva has positioned himself as a leader of the Developing World, his domestic popularity isn't strong enough to yet push his protege' over the finishing line.
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
11:33 AM on 06/24/2010
Obama, coming from a position without strength, asking the rest of the world to continue stimulus while the US backs off on stimulus. It seems someone holding UK and USA bonds is calling the shots on deficit spending.
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Kache
Toodlum, wake up, I hear a prowler downstairs
01:24 PM on 06/24/2010
Actually the investor class is calling the shots through a campaign of intimidation. Fear that investors will put their money in mason jars instead of bonds is what is driving countries to cut deficits. The argument is that the more deficit there is to buy, the fewer bonds investors will buy to finance the deficits. The fear is that governments will consequently have to raise the rates on bonds to attract those investors, driving up loan rate to consumers and businesses. Question is, is the investor class bluffing?
06:26 PM on 06/24/2010
I agree Obama is in a weak position. Thoguh not for the reason you mentioned. Obama is MIA in pushing for a jobs bill, extension of unemployment beneftis etc to help the victims ahfted by the kelptocrat class. And he is totally inept in psuhing a credible narrative against the deficit Peacocks.