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Chinese Finance Minister Jin Renqing (L)
shakes hands with World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz, during the G7
Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting held in Essen,
Germany, Feb. 10, 2007. (Xinhua Photo/Wu Xiaoling) Photo
Gallery>>> |
ESSEN, Germany, Feb. 10 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Finance Minister Jin Renqing on
Saturday delivered a speech to his G7 counterparts and bank chiefs, focusing on
world economic situation and the global economic imbalance.
In his speech at the discussion, Jin briefed the
participants on the current economic situation in China and its major features.
Governor of the People's Bank of China Zhou Xiaochuan also attended the meeting.
Jin stressed that China will continuously implement
macro-adjustment policies, stimulate domestic demand and conduct financial
structure reforms, adding that his country will work together with others to
promote the orderly adjustment of the global economic imbalance.
In their discussion, the ministers and bank chiefs
urged major economies to strengthen policy dialogues to reduce the risks of
world economy and financial markets, according to the Chinese delegation.
On Friday, Jin and finance ministers from India,
Brazil, South Africa, Russia and Mexico discussed the development of bond
markets in emerging economies and trade issues.
The ministers urged the resumption of the Doha round
of trade negotiations, which are very important for rebuilding multilateral
trade system, the stable development of world economy and poverty reduction.
Jin told his counterparts from the five nations that
developing bond markets in the emerging economies will help build their domestic
capital markets and adjusting the global economic imbalance.
However, he noted that setting up bond markets is a
gradual process, calling on the industrialized nations to provide technical aid
to the emerging economies and help them improve their institutional capability.
The developed countries should also implement
responsible macro-policy and work with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
other international monetary institutions to monitor the short-term speculative
capital to ensure international financial stability, creating a good environment
for the emerging economies, Jin said.
Speaking of the Doha Round trade talks, Jin urged the
developed economies to realize the special treatment for the developing
economies, stressing that this round is for development.
Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the
Group of Seven industrialized nations on Friday opened the two-day meeting,
which will focus on the development of capital markets in emerging market
economies and other world economic issues and fiscal policy, including
consolidating macroeconomic stability, and the role of hedge funds in the
stability of international financial markets.
The Doha Round of trade talks, which began in 2001
and reached an impasse over disputes on farm subsidies, is one important topic
to be discussed at the meeting.
Jin attended the meeting as a guest. Russia, despite
its membership in the Group of Eight, remains to be a guest at the meeting
because G-7 members believe Russia's economic and financial system does not fit
with theirs.
The ministers from G-7, which comprises the United
States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan, met with their
counterparts from five developing nations -- China, Mexico, South Africa, India
and Brazil.
The finance chiefs discussed setting up bond markets
in the developing economies using their domestic currencies to try to avoid
financial crisis.
They also talked about the promotion of growth and
the fight against poverty by effecting improvements in the public finance
sectors of developing countries, and fiscal policy for the promotion of energy
efficiency and of an energy strategy increasingly reliant on renewable energies.
The meeting in Essen is one of several meetings that
will lead to the G-8 summit in the German Baltic Sea resort of Heiligendamm.