G20 summit sees squabbles

The Group of 20 laboured today to agree how to put the world economy on a sounder footing as renewed fears over Ireland's ability…

The Group of 20 laboured today to agree how to put the world economy on a sounder footing as renewed fears over Ireland's ability to pay its debts underscored the lingering fallout of the global financial crisis.

The G20 had hoped to use a two-day summit to recapture the unity forged in the depths of the crisis two years ago in order to soothe tensions over exchange rates generated by imbalances between cash-rich exporting nations and debt-burdened importers.

But even as US president Barack Obama voiced confidence that leaders would find a formula for more balanced and sustainable growth, negotiators squabbled over the language in a closing statement to be issued when the summit ends tomorrow.

"The persistence of these imbalances is a problem in the long term and these things have to be addressed," said Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper.

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"Will they be addressed at this conference? I'm not so sure, but I think we're getting a more frank discussion on some of these matters, that they do have to be resolved," he said.

The meeting has been billed as a chance for rich nations to strike a grand bargain on how to rejuvenate the world economic order with emerging powerhouses like India and China.

But leaders appeared unlikely to venture far beyond agreements reached by their finance ministers last month.

"The real issue is, given that it is a problem, how do we coordinate policy? I don't think you should be too demanding ... because such policy coordination has never been attempted before," India's chief G20 negotiator, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, said.

A major irritant in the run-up to the summit has been the Federal Reserve's $600 billion bond-buying spree to revive the US economy, which emerging markets fear will trigger a flood of money into their markets, boosting inflation and asset prices.

Former fed chairman Alan Greenspan stirred that pot, saying the US central bank's policy was deliberately weakening the dollar.

"The US will never do that," US treasury secretary Timothy Geithner shot back in an interview with CNBC. "We will never seek to weaken our currency as a tool to gain competitive advantage or to grow the economy."

Mr Geithner again criticised China's currency policies, saying the world's second-largest economy risked stoking inflation pressures. China earlier reported that consumer price inflation had hit a 25-month high in October.

Yu Jianhua, an official with China's ministry of commerce, said Beijing had no intention to confront the United States over currencies or trade issues.

But, Mr Yu added, Washington "should not politicise the yuan issue, should not blame others for its domestic problems and should not force others to take medicine for its own disease".

A source with Russia's delegation weighed in, criticising "unilateral decisions" by some countries to weaken their exchange rates that could spark fears of global currency wars.

Mr Obama, speaking after a meeting with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, said he was confident leaders would support a programme for promoting balanced growth, building on a agreement reached at a G20 summit in Pittsburgh in 2009.

"I don't think this is a controversial proposition," he said.

The world has been spared an outbreak of protectionism since the crisis. But the cocktail of low growth and high unemployment is making it harder for politicians to muster support for opening their markets wider.

Despite the presence of Mr Lee and Mr Obama, South Korea and the United States failed on the sidelines of the summit to finalise a long-stalled stalled free trade deal.

Mr Lee said a "little bit" of progress had been made since G20 finance ministers met in Gyeongju, South Korea, last month but deep divisions remained over how best to reduce imbalances.

A draft of the final communique showed the leaders would back the idea of "indicative guidelines" to narrow surpluses and deficits on the current account, the broadest measure of trade.

However, they were undecided on whether these would be based on indicators that are "measurable" or, more vaguely, "quantitative and qualitative".

An idea floated last month by Mr Geithner to shrink imbalances to agreed numerical ranges has now been taken off the table.

The draft showed G20 members would agree to "refrain from competitive devaluation" of exchange rates, but they were debating whether to include the words "competitive undervaluation" - a euphemism for Washington's dim view of China's currency stance.

China's yuan, also known as the renminbi, rose 0.25 per cent today and has climbed almost 3 per cent since Beijing loosened its grip on the tightly managed currency in June.

Washington has welcomed the slow-but-steady appreciation, although it has said the rate of climb needs to be swifter.

Reuters