Britain urges steps to insure financial system
By JANE WARDELL
AP Business Writer
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) - Britain called for consideration of
a global tax on financial transactions to insure against another
crisis, and urged world finance officials meeting Saturday in
Scotland to agree on bearing the cost of fighting climate change.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown told finance ministers from
the Group of 20 rich and developing countries it was time to
consider a global financial levy, such as a tax on transactions or
an insurance fee, that could support a ``resolution fund'' that
could serve as a buffer against future bailouts.
In its last meeting as chair of the Group of 20 before South
Korea takes over next year, Britain is attempting to push through
discussion of issues it views as critical to future world economic
growth.
Brown superseded his Treasury chief Alistair Darling to address
officials directly, saying it was time to consider whether banks
needed ``a better economic and social contract'' that reflected
their responsibilities to society.
But he said Britain would not act alone in imposing any tax, and
that any measures must be implemented by all major financial
centers. Britain, the U.S., Germany and other countries have spent
hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer money to rescue
financial companies that suffered heavy losses from risky
investments.
Brown's comments bolster earlier calls from former German
Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck for a global tax on all
cross-border financial transactions.
Critics argue that measures such as the so-called Tobin tax - a
flat tax on currency transactions named after the Nobel Prize
laureate James Tobin - would just dry up world financial flows.
Supporters suggest the money could be used to protect countries
from spillovers of financial crises.
The money could also be used to assist poorer countries in the
battle against climate change - another issue being pushed by
Britain at the gathering in the university and golfing town of St.
Andrews in northeast Scotland.
Darling urged the officials to reach an agreement on bearing the
cost of fighting climate change before a UN summit on global
warming next month.
Darling said officials need to agree on a finance package to
help poorer nations develop green industries and adapt to climate
change.
``I think that it really is imperative that when we reach the
end of the day, that we have shown that we have made some real
progress in dealing with what is a very real and urgent problem
now,'' Darling said. ``We will do everything that we can to reach
that agreement in advance of the Copenhagen meeting.''
There have been disagreements about which forum was the most
appropriate place to discuss funding to fight climate change.
The push to put it on the agenda here reflects concern that
nations will fail to agree in Copenhagen on Dec. 6 on a successor
to the Kyoto treaty limiting carbon emissions.
``It really is important ... that we as finance ministers are
engaged in this, because if there isn't an agreement on finance ...
then the Copenhagen agreement is going to be much much more
difficult,'' he said. The G-20 represents around 90 percent of the
world's wealth, 80 percent of world trade, and two-thirds of the
world's population.
The EU has said that there should be a euro100 billion annual
package of public and private finance by 2020 and has urged the
U.S. to lay out its position.
But the Obama administration has been preoccupied with prickly
domestic issues such as healthcare.
Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen said it was now
``obvious'' that the December climate change talks ``can't achieve
the final result in terms of the new legally binding treaty which
goes into all details.''
But he said finance ministers held the key to a final deal,
urging them to come up with concrete proposals on funding to help
developing nations tackle and cope with a warming climate.
In a speech to the G-20 meeting, he called on officials to set
up a global climate fund that ``should be ready to work
immediately.'' He also asked them to keep an open mind on raising
funds from new areas such as a global cap-and-trade program for air
and sea travel.
The climate issue has been the focus of protests around St.
Andrews. A small group of protesters blocked the coastal road
Friday night between the town and the nearby resort where the
meeting was held by chaining themselves together. On Saturday
around 200 demonstrators gathered at West Sands beach on Saturday
with a group dressed as bankers sticking their heads in the sand.
There are also divisions among officials over attempts to secure
future global growth.
Host country Britain, still mired in recession, is keen to
continued international effort to support a still fledging
recovery, while other G-20 nations, including the United States,
Japan and Germany, want to debate ending measures to boost growth.
The finance ministers and central bankers are trying to find a
way to make good on a pledge by world leaders at their September
summit in Pittsburgh to subject their economic policies to the
scrutiny of a peer review. That process would determine whether
each country's efforts were ``collectively consistent'' with
sustainable global growth.
The goal is to avoid repeating problems like huge trade deficits
and credit-fueled consumption in the U.S., and massive trade
surpluses and savings in China and elsewhere. China's appetite to
fund U.S. debt by buying Treasuries was seen as playing a major
role in fueling the U.S. housing boom and subsequent collapse.
The G-20 is comprised of Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Britain,
Canada, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico,
Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United
States and the rotating EU presidency.
AP Reporters Aoife White and Ben McConville contributed to this
report.
11/07/09 10:01
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