Is the current global economic crisis remaking global
power relations?
By Masahudu Ankiilu Kunateh, Ghanadot
Accra, Sept 29, Ghanadot - The
global economic crisis is contributing to shifts in power
relations in the world that will impact currency markets,
monetary policy, trade relations and the role of developing
countries, said World Bank Group President Robert B.
Zoellick.
In a speech ahead of the Annual Meetings in Istanbul, Turkey
of the World Bank and IMF, Zoellick said leaders should
reshape the multilateral system and forge a “responsible
globalization” that would encourage balanced global growth
and financial stability, embrace global efforts to counter
climate change, and advance opportunity for the poorest.
“The old international economic order was struggling to keep
up with change before the crisis,” Zoellick told an audience
at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International
Studies of the Johns Hopkins University, in Washington, DC.
“Today’s upheaval has revealed the stark gaps and compelling
needs. It is time we caught up and moved ahead.”
In the speech entitled “After the Crisis?”, Zoellick said:
“Peer review of a new Framework for Strong, Sustainable and
Balanced Growth agreed at last week’s G-20 Summit is a good
start, but it will require a new level of international
cooperation and coordination, including a new willingness to
take the findings of global monitoring seriously. Peer
review will need to be peer pressure.”
It was also important for the G-20 to remember those
countries not at the table. “As agreed in Pittsburgh last
week, the G-20 should become the premier forum for
international economic cooperation among the advanced
industrialized countries and rising powers. But it cannot be
a stand-alone committee. Nor can it ignore the voices of the
over 160 countries left outside.”
China’s strong response during the economic crisis and rapid
recovery had underscored its growing influence as a
stabilizing force in today’s global economy. But its leaders
face challenges caused by rapid credit growth and the
economy’s dependence on exports.
The United States had clearly been hit hard by the crisis.
Its prospects depend on whether it will address large
deficits, recover without inflation, and overhaul its
financial system. The United States has a history of
recovering from setbacks. “But the United States would be
mistaken to take for granted the dollar’s place as the
world’s predominant reserve currency,” Zoellick said.
“Looking forward, there will increasingly be other options
to the dollar.”
The crisis has brought to the attention of lawmakers the
significant role played by central banks. Central banks
performed well once the crisis hit but their role in the
build-up was less convincing. “In the United States, it will
be difficult to vest the independent and powerful
technocrats at the Federal Reserve with more authority,”
said Zoellick. “My reading of recent crisis management is
that the Treasury Department needed greater authority to
pull together a bevy of different regulators. Moreover, the
Treasury is an Executive department, and therefore Congress
and the public can more directly oversee how it uses any
added authority.”
Developing countries had already been on the rise before the
crisis and their position has been further strengthened
because of it. Their growing share of the world economy was
a positive development. “Looking beyond, a more balanced and
inclusive growth model for the world would benefit from
multiple poles of growth,” Zoellick said. “With investments
in infrastructure, people, and private businesses, countries
in Latin America, Asia, and the broader Middle East could
contribute to a “New Normal” for the world economy.”
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