The European Union increased pressure on the International Monetary Fund today to consider a global tax on financial transactions to limit the risk of another economic crisis.
In a draft statement expected to be approved on the second day of an EU summit, the region's leaders also underlined the need for "sound and effective" financial sector pay but did not specifically back British calls to tax bankers' bonuses heavily.
The leaders were also discussing on the final day of the summit how much money to give developing countries in the next three years to help them fight the effects of global warming.
"The European Council (of EU leaders) emphasises the importance of renewing the economic and social contract between financial institutions and the society they serve and of ensuring that the public benefits in good times and is protected from risk," they said in a draft statement obtained by Reuters.
"The European Council encourages the IMF to consider the full range of options including insurance fees, resolution funds, contingent capital arrangements and a global financial transaction levy in its review."
The IMF is considering how to limit risk in the financial system following the economic crisis.
British prime minister Gordon Brown called for consideration of a tax on financial transactions at a summit of the Group of 20 developed and emerging nations last month but faced opposition from US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.
Then, Mr Brown said the proceeds could be used to fund future financial bailouts but Mr Geithner said Washington opposed such a tax as a way to dampen risky bank behaviour.
A so-called Tobin tax would discourage short-term speculation with the aim of limiting the risk of instability on financial markets.
Without worldwide support, experts say it would surely be doomed to failure.
French economy minister Christine Lagarde said the need for close co-operation was highlighted by difficulties in the group of 16 countries that use the euro.
"We're at a decisive turning point for Europe and the euro zone," Ms Lagarde told reporters in Paris, responding to a question about debt problems in Greece.
"That is the point of the discussions we are having today on the necessity or otherwise, the depth or otherwise, of even better coordinated economic policies," she said.
The draft statement did not refer to calls by Britain and France to tax banker's bonuses heavily after public anger that bankers are again making large sums even though some of their banks have recently been bailed out with tax payers money.
But it said: "Remuneration policies within the financial sector must promote sound and effective risk management and should contribute to preventing future crises in the economy."
The British government said on Wednesday banks operating in Britain would be charged a 50 per cent tax rate on employees' bonuses of above £25,000.
EU leaders also said government measures to stimulate the economy should stay in place until the "recovery is fully secured".
"Forecasts suggest a weak recovery in 2010, followed by a return to stronger growth in 2011," heads of the 27-nation EU said in a statement after the summit in Brussels today.
"But uncertainties and fragilities remain, while the employment and social situation is expected to deteriorate further in 2010," the statement continued.
Once the recovery is in place, governments should rein in their budget deficits, the statement said. Fiscal
consolidation should start in 2011 "at the latest" as long as forecasts by the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, "continue to indicate that the recovery is strengthening and becoming self- sustaining".
Agencies