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G20 comes out of austerity mode

G20 nations resolve to add $2 trillion to global economy

Sydney: The world’s biggest economies vowed on Sunday to boost global growth by more than $2 trillion over five years, shifting their focus away from austerity as a fragile recovery takes hold.

Finance ministers and central bank governors from the Group of 20, which accounts for 85 per cent of the world economy, also agreed to pursue greater transparency about monetary policy after rifts about the US taper.

They expressed “deep regret” that reforms to the International Monetary Fund have stalled, because the United States Congress has yet to ratify them.

After their meeting in Sydney, the G20 ministers issued what host Australia called “an unprecedented” and unusually brief two-page statement to drive “a return to strong, sustainable and balanced growth in the global economy”.

“We will develop ambitious but realistic policies with the aim to lift our collective GDP by more than two percent above the trajectory imp-lied by current policies over the coming five years,” they said in reference to two percentage points.

“This is over $2 trillion more in real terms and will lead to significant additional jobs,” US treasury secretary Jack Lew stressed at a press conference that the G20 had left the austerity debate behind and was fully focused on growth.

“If you look where we were a year ago, debating austerity... This (weekend) was a debate about how can we work together to share best practices and develop an approach where our individual economies can grow and the global economy can hit the objective that is set forth in this text,” he said.

The IMF has said the strategy could add half a percentage point to global growth annually over four years starting next year.

The fund currently projects growth of 3.7 percent this year and 3.9 percent in 2015, with each G20 country to hammer out the finer points before the leaders’ summit in Brisbane in November.

“We believe that if the reforms that have been identified are adhered to, delivered by the various authorities, then that is a goal that can be achieved or possibly exceeded,” said IMF chief Christine Lagarde, adding that meetings were held in an “excellent spirit”.

Ministers said the figure could be reached by increasing investment and employment and enhancing trade, adding that there was “no room for complacency” and that addressing the challenges “requires ambition”.

Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey, the G20 chair, had been pushing ministers to agree to faster global growth targets, with private-sector investment as a central plank.

He stressed the need for structural reforms to drive growth.

( Source : AFP )
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