Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
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European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia presents the EU Autumn economic forecasts during a news conference at the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels November 3, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BRUSSELS, Nov. 3 (Xinhua) -- Finance ministers from
the eurozone countries are due to meet later Monday to seek a common front on
reforming the global financial system in the wake of the financial crisis.
As a regular practice, they would be joined by their
counterparts from other European Union (EU) member states Tuesday.
A French official, whose country holds the EU
rotating presidency, said the monthly gatherings were meant to prepare for an
informal EU summit later this week where leaders would hammer out a common
position for the upcoming global financial talks in Washington on Nov. 15.
"The ministers of finance would be preparing for
these two summits," the official said.
In a document prepared for discussion by EU finance
ministers, the French presidency has proposed the reform of international
financial institutions, notably the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the
World Bank, to improve supervision and monitoring of global financial markets.
Several EU leaders such as British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy have called for a new Bretton
Woods system in the global financial reform push, supporting an overhaul of the
IMF and the World Bank, which are Bretton Woods institutions set up after World
War II.
The document says emerging economies led by China and
India should be given more say in the Group of Eight (G8) industrialized
countries, a rich countries' club which dominates the IMF and other
international financial institutions.
"Further reform of the G8 should be considered to
make this group more inclusive of emerging countries," says the document, adding
that "further association of emerging and developing countries is essential" to
increase legitimacy of institutions like the IMF.
With tougher financial regulation at the core of the
EU's proposals, the document also urges the setting up of supervisory colleges
to oversee cross-border banks.
"Supervisory colleges should be rapidly established
for all significant cross-border firms to ensure effective oversight," the
document says.
It says risky practices and behavior should be
avoided, calling on the global summit to draw up codes of conduct to address
"incentives to excessive risk-taking in the financial industry, including
through compensation schemes."
Credit rating agencies, blamed for being too slow to
warn about the risks in the U.S. sub-prime mortgage market, where the current
financial crisis originated, should also be made to register, the document adds.
More than a month after the financial storm hit
Europe, it has deepened in the EU, with several Eastern European countries like
Hungary under severe stress and forced to seek help from the EU and the IMF.
EU finance ministers are expected to agree on an
urgent financial assistance package to Hungary, amounting to 6.5 billion euros
(8.3 billion U.S. dollars).
The EU support will be granted in conjunction with a
loan from the IMF and the World Bank worth 20 billion euros (26 billion U.S.
dollars).
Although the European Commission proposed last week
that the ceiling for EU financial assistance to non-euro member states
experiencing difficulties with balances of payments be doubled to 25 billion
euros (32 billion U.S. dollars), the French official said EU finance ministers
were unlikely to make any decision on the issue since the European Parliament
has to be consulted first.
The finance ministers meet as the financial crisis
looks ready to plunge the European economy into recession.
In an economic forecast today, the Commission said
the eurozone economy is headed toward a recession, with the EU likely to follow
suit.
Due to the ongoing financial crisis, the worst in
decades, both the eurozone and the EU economy are expected to grind to a halt
in2009 and only start picking up in 2010.
In 2009, the eurozone economy will grow at a mere 0.1
percent before recovering to 0.9 percent in 2010, while the EU economy will grow
at 0.2 percent this year before hitting 1.1 percent in 2010, according to the
forecast.
Among large EU member states, Britain, a big victim
of the financial crisis, is facing a deep recession, with its economy set to
contract by 1.0 percent in 2009. Germany, France and Italy would all see zero
growth.
The Commission said last week it will propose a
recovery package later this month to save the real economy from the impact of
the financial crisis.
The French official said EU finance ministers were
unlikely to work on the stimulus plan this time around.
