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Statement
by U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr. at
the G-20
US
Treasury Department
Press
release, Sept 18, 2007
Kleinmond, South Africa -- U.S. Treasury Secretary
Henry M. Paulson, Jr. issued the following statement
during the G-20 meeting of Finance Ministers and
Central Bank Governors in Kleinmond, South Africa.
My career in the financial sector has allowed me to
witness the emergence and growing relevance of new
participants in international financial markets.
Indeed, the resilience of many dynamic emerging
markets in the face of the current global financial
market turmoil is testimony to the sound economic
stewardship in these countries and the importance of
the G-20 as a forum for contributing to the
management of the international financial system. I
was pleased to have the opportunity to meet
bilaterally with many colleagues.
When we discussed the turmoil in the capital
markets, I explained that we are going through a
period of reassessing risk and that will take time
and we will experience volatility along the way. In
discussions on the decline in the U.S. housing
market I noted it is still unfolding and I view it
as the most significant current risk to our economy.
Even so, I believe we have a healthy, diversified
economy that will continue to grow.
As I've noted before, we are taking a two-pronged
approach to dealing with the capital markets turmoil
and the housing downturn in the U.S. In the short
term, we are working to avoid preventable
foreclosures and promote orderly markets. We are
also focused on policy issues such as transparency,
risk management, the accounting and valuation of
complex products and the role of rating agencies so
we can avoid a recurrence of these events in the
future. We took note of the ongoing work of the
Financial Stability Forum (FSF) on these topics,
which are of great relevance to the G-20. We also
agreed to establish a G-20 Study Group to further
our understanding of the lessons from the latest
credit market turmoil, and this should help
supplement the FSF's work.
A major focus of this weekend has been reform of the
International Financial Institutions. The G-20 is
uniquely situated to constructively address this
issue; its member countries make up 85 percent of
global GDP and emerging markets have a growing and
important role in this group. At both the World Bank
and the International Monetary Fund we have strong
leaders who have put forward compelling agendas and
who now have an opportunity, with support from the
member countries, to energize reform efforts and
make good progress.
I urged my G-20 counterparts to join the U.S. in
showing greater leadership on the Doha talks, and
underscored the equal importance of results in
agriculture, non-agriculture market access, and
services – including financial services. Reducing
tariff and other trade and investment barriers and
maintaining open markets is critical to ensuring
that the benefits of trade are shared broadly and
success on Doha is the single most effective thing
we can do to raise living standards around the
world. The United States is committed to working
with our global trading partners and is ready to
negotiate off the texts that have been produced in
Geneva to ensure a successful Doha Round.
We spoke about commodity market dynamics, managing
commodity-led booms and busts, hedging strategies,
and non-renewable resource funds. Non-renewable
resource funds are one type of sovereign wealth
fund. The U.S. is committed to open investment.
Sovereign wealth funds should be able to invest
globally, but it is inevitable that when large,
government-run, opaque funds are investing around
the globe, questions will arise. To address this we
believe a considered, multilateral approach to
sovereign wealth funds that maintains openness is in
the best interest of both countries that have these
funds and countries in which the funds invest. We
have had good support for our proposal that the IMF
develop best practices for sovereign wealth funds.
Work is also progressing in the OECD to develop best
practices for countries that receive foreign
government-controlled investment. Recipient
countries have a responsibility to maintain
openness.
We must continue to stand against threats to the
global financial system, including the financing of
terrorism and proliferation, money laundering and
other forms of illicit finance. Continued
cooperation among the IMF, World Bank, and the
Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to promote strong
international standards is essential to this effort.
In particular, we recognize the recent warning by
the FATF about the risks posed by Iran to the
international financial system and call on all
countries to take appropriate action to mitigate
those risks. Leaders in the G-20 have a
responsibility to prevent Iran, and illicit actors
more generally, from misusing the financial system
to support their threatening conduct.
Finally, I would like to congratulate and thank
South Africa for its outstanding leadership as chair
of the G-20 for 2007. The United States was much
honored to have contributed by hosting one of the
three workshops, on commodity cycles and financial
stability, in May at the Treasury in Washington. We
look forward to working closely with Brazil as it
takes the G-20 chair in 2008.
US
Treasury Department
Press
release, Sept 18, 2007
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