Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
PARIS, Nov. 13 (Xinhua) -- Russia and the European Union (EU) share some common views on the current international financial crisis, said President Dmitry Medvedev on Thursday.
Speaking at the EU-Russia investors forum held in
Cannes in southeast France, Medvedev said Russia has reached consensus with the
EU on issues such as the cause and nature of the ongoing financial crisis.
The two sides also shared similar views on the
reforms of the international financial system and the lessons the world should
learn after the crisis, with only some "minor" differences, he added.
Medvedev said reforms are crucial to the current
international financial system, as well as multilateral financial organizations
such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
In an interview with the French daily Le Figaro,
Medvedev said he has already conveyed Russia's suggestions on how to tackle the
crisis to some other state leaders, including French President Nicolas Sarkozy,
Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
He said the world should hammer out a long-term
effective plan to stabilize and reform its financial system, laying down
fundamental principles for a new Bretton Woods System, which includes new
international credit institutions and revised risk security schemes.
EU leaders gathered last week in Brussels to
coordinate their position before going to Washington for the G20 summit slated
for Nov. 15.
During the G20 summit, the EU is expected to propose
five specific objectives so as to push for an overhaul of the global financial
system, including increased transparency in financial markets, reforms to
international financial organizations, 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.
