Special Report: Hu Attends Financial Summit, APEC Meeting, Visits Four Nations
Special Report: Global Financial Crisis¡¡
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 (Xinhua) -- Leaders attending the
G-20 summit on financial markets and the global economy on Saturday agreed to an
action plan of immediate and medium-term measures to cope with the financial and
economic woes now gripping the world.
The tasks include strengthening transparency and
accountability, enhancing sound regulation, promoting integrity in financial
markets, reinforcing international cooperation, and reforming international
financial institutions.
The leaders task their finance ministers with
ensuring that the measures are "fully and vigorously implemented."
"They are responsible for the development and
implementation of these recommendations drawing on the ongoing work of relevant
bodies, including the IMF (International Monetary Fund), an expanded Financial
Stability Forum (FSF), and standard setting bodies," the action plan said.
Immediate actions, which are to be taken before March
31, 2009,include addressing weaknesses in accounting and disclosure standards,
developing recommendations to mitigate pro-cyclicality, enhancing the standards
of credit rating agencies, and enhancing guidance to strengthen banks' risk
management practices.
They also include enhancing regulatory cooperation
between jurisdictions internationally and regionally, establishing "supervisory
colleges for all major cross-border financial institutions, steps necessary to
strengthen cross-border crisis management arrangements, and the expansion of the
FSF "to a broader membership of emerging economies."
Medium-term measures include working toward the
objective of creating a "single high-quality global standard" for accounting,
collaboration to ensure "consistent application and enforcement of high-quality
accounting standards," enhanced risk disclosures by financial institutions,
commitment to undertaking a "Financial Sector Assessment Program" report and
supporting the transparent assessments of countries' national regulatory
systems, and requiring that credit rating agencies that provide public ratings
be registered.
Other medium-term measures prescribed include
development of robust and internationally consistent approaches for liquidity
supervision of and central bank liquidity operations for cross-border banks,
awareness and ability to "respond rapidly to evolution and innovation in
financial markets and products," monitoring of "substantial changes" in asset
prices and their implications for the macroeconomy and the financial system,
implementation of national and international measures that protect the global
financial system "from uncooperative and non-transparent jurisdictions" that
pose risks of illicit financial activity.
The action plan also calls for other medium-term
measures like ensuring that temporary measures to restore stability and
confidence have minimal distortions and are unwound in a timely, well-sequenced
and coordinated manner, greater voice and representation for emerging and
developing economies in the Bretton Woods institutions, and strengthening of the
IMF's role in providing macro-financial policy advice.

