Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
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France's Foreign Minister Bernard
Kouchner (C) poses for a family photo with EU Foreign Ministers and
delegation chiefs at the end of the Union for the Mediterranean
ministerial conference in Marseille, November 4, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BRUSSELS, Nov. 6 (Xinhua) -- The European Union (EU)
leaders are set to gather in Brussels on Friday for an informal summit, during
which they are expected to coordinate for a joint EU position and speak out its
demands at the forthcoming Washington international summit on the global
financial crisis, whose adverse impacts have been widely spreading.
FRENCH PROPOSAL WILL BE
BLUEPRINT FOR EU JOINT POSITION
Analysts say the blueprint for the EU's coordinated
position will be a 10-page proposal put forward by the bloc's French presidency,
and agreed upon by the EU finance ministers on Tuesday.
The core of the plan will be to tighten global
financial supervision, and reform the international financial institutions
including the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Under the plan, EU ministers agreed to give more
power to the international financial institutions, notably the IMF and the World
Bank, where emerging economies like China and India should play a greater role.
They also called for "an information network and an early warning system" that
would detect risks to the global financial system.
The plan recommends increased transparency in
financial markets, compulsory registration and monitoring of credit rating
agencies, new codes of conduct to prevent bank managers from taking excessive
risks and harmonization of international accounting and bank capitalization
rules.
The EU member states hold that the root for the
ongoing financial crisis lies in the loose financial monitoring. While they call
for tightening the EU-wide financial supervision, they have also expressed their
hope for global joint actions in this regard so as to avoid a repeat of the
current crisis, because unilateral EU moves could only lead the 27-member bloc
to an unfavorable situation.
French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde said
Tuesday that the French proposal is clearly aimed at "pushing at the global
level" and had "massive support" within the EU.
But differences still exist over the details of the
plan among EU member states.
MEMBERS DIFFER ON DETAILS
OF FRENCH PLAN
Some EU members have been complaining that the plan
was too detailed and ambitious and might lead to over-supervision of the
financial market.
Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg pointed out that
the most pressing task for the moment is to find quick answers to overcome the
financial crisis, which is not over yet, but not regulations and rules.
The Czech Republic, which is to hold the rotating EU
presidency in the first half of 2009, also criticized the French for being too
hasty because reforms of the international financial system could not be
realized in one day. Prague hopes that the EU would put forward a set of
principles at the Washington summit of the world's 20 largest economies, while
the details for such principles should be discussed at a later stage.
According to analysts, as compared with some
"radical" ideas proposed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and British Prime
Minister Gordon Brown shortly after the financial crisis hit Europe, the French
proposal this time has been watered down.
Both Sarkozy and Brown had called for thoroughly
reforming the global financial system, which should be replaced by a brand-new
Bretton Woods system. They had also suggested the establishment of a
"supervisory college" that would monitor large financial firms that operate
across borders, but it was dropped. Brown's idea to make the IMF a powerful
international regulator and financier was also watered down.
Germany was concerned the wording in the French plan
may imply the need for a super-national economic governance, either at the
global or at the EU level.
"It could be interpreted that we are aiming for a
coordinated, overarching economic policy" at EU level, said German Finance
Minister Peer Steinbruck. "We would be very skeptical about that. We do not need
a European economic government."
Berlin has been strongly opposed to a renewed call by
Sarkozy for economic governance in the euro zone, fearing it could undermine the
independence of the European Central Bank.
Analysts say that differences clearly exist among EU
nations on how to push forward global financial reforms, and could erect
barriers for the EU to speak with one voice at Washington.
