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5 Things to Watch for at the G-20
Thierry Chesnot, File Pool / AP Photo
As the world’s leaders discuss the world’s problems in Pittsburgh tomorrow, Steven R. Weisman breaks down what’s at stake—climate change, economic recovery, banking reform.
A century ago Pittsburgh was home to one of the greatest concentrations of millionaires on earth. Their names still rumble with authority: Carnegie, Mellon, Frick, Westinghouse, Heinz and Schwab.
This week the names descending on Pittsburgh are millionaires only in the sense that the global financial crisis forced them to bail out, and effectively own, some of the biggest financial institutions in their countries: Obama, Brown, Sarkozy, Merkel, Hu, Hatoyama and many others.
World leaders are no doubt waiting for Obama to emerge as a leader of real stature, more than a tour guide to a steel city.
Their task is to take the measure of the Great Recession and, with more rumble than authority perhaps, reassure us that we are finally heading out of it. Look for them to proclaim that they are readying an overhaul of the global financial system to avoid the next crisis. Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, recently was kind enough to say that “even the English” recognize the need for reform.
Some skepticism is in order, and nothing much is expected to be formally decided. But unlike many of these international confabs, this meeting could be an important one for both President Obama and his counterparts in moving the discussion toward some necessary adjustments in the global economy. A little background first:
Some 35 leaders are convening at the confluence of the Monongahela, Allegheny and Ohio Rivers under the auspices of the Group of 20—G-20 for short. The first thing you will note is that the numbers don’t coincide. This was a party where the 20 main organizers did not want to make too many colleagues feel bad for being left out. The invitation list kept growing and growing.
Why Pittsburgh?
Mr. Obama, who chose the site, says it’s because Pittsburgh “has transformed itself from the city of steel to a center for high-tech innovation—including green technology, education and training, and research and development.”
Could it also be that Pennsylvania is crucial to his presidential campaigns, and that its media outlets also extend to Ohio, another important state struggling to recover from the economic downturn? Just asking.
Here are five main issues to watch:
• Nomi Prins: Obama’s Pittsburgh Checklist
• Who’s In, Who’s Out at the G-20
• More Daily Beast G-20 coverage1) The Obama administration has leaked outlines of its proposal for the summit to approve an agenda of “sustainable and balanced growth” coming out of the recession. What this means for the U.S. is that it is telling China, Japan, Germany and other big exporters not to count on Americans to go into hock while they import foreign goods, as Americans have in the last decade. To some extent this issue is a proxy for the United States’s longtime effort to persuade China to switch from an export-driven to a consumer-driven economy, and to let its currency appreciate and not rely so heavily on flooding other countries with their cheap products, much to the ire of the Congress and the American labor movement. A second aspect of the growth strategy is what it will signal about the intention of the major economic powers to engage in an “exit strategy” from the recent binge of government intervention that was aimed at averting an even worse global meltdown. But not much specifics are expected on when the U.S. will raise interest rates, cut federal spending or reprivatize the American banking system.
2) Speaking of China, trade will be a big and perhaps contentious issue, because the Chinese are still furious over Obama’s recent imposition of tariffs on Chinese tires—and the implicit threat that such tariffs could be slapped on other products like steel, cement, aluminum, paper and many other things if China does not let the value of its currency, the renminbi, rise more than it has against the dollar. Obama has yet to convince global economic powers that he really is in favor of free trade. He’s yet to convince business interests in the United States either. Look for pressure on him in Pittsburgh and how he responds to it.









We can hope for the best in international
cooperation. However, when the U.S. political
parties can't cooperate in bringing forth
needed and sustainable changes, how can we expect the rest of the world to look to us for leadership. We need statesmen rather than
politicians as well as term limits.
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