Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
ROME, Feb. 13 (Xinhua) -- The financial ministers and
central bank chiefs of the world's seven leading industrial countries (G7) have
gathered in Rome to discuss how to deal with the global financial downturn.
Representatives from the United States, Japan,
Germany, Britain, Italy, Canada and France were expected to consider new
financial markets rules and concerns about protectionist measures.
A major change in the exchange rate policy was
unlikely, however, local media quoted G7 officials as saying.
A final statement was likely to be issued Saturday
afternoon, and the participants were expected to brief reporters.
According to a copy of the draft statement being
circulated among reporters, participants would call for governments to stick to
fair cross-border competition and free trade.
To stabilize the economy and financial markets would
be the current priority for all, and undesirable distortions should be avoided
with joint efforts, according to the draft.
WARNING AGAINST PROTECTIONISM
Worries are mounting inside and outside the meeting
that protectionism may spread as governments try to protect domestic jobs and
their national industries amidst the economic upheaval.
Japanese Financial Minister Shoichi Nakagawa said
Friday he told his U.S. counterpart Timothy Geithner that Washington should not
"pursue protectionism," an apparent criticism of the U.S. stimulus package which
included such requirements as "Buy America."
Other participants also voiced anti-protectionism
stands. British Financial Minister Alistair Darling said protectionism "is very
damaging and will hold up the recovery." He called for the awareness of the need
to stick to free trade.
Meanwhile, German Financial Minister Peer Stein
brueck appealed for full efforts to "ensure history does not repeat itself,"
referring to the possibility that policy makers may duplicate the mistake made
during the Great Depression when a wave of tit-for-tat protectionism choked
global trade and prolonged the economic pain.
WORSE SITUATION THAN EXPECTED
The meeting came as statistics published Friday wiped
out any illusions that the euro-zone is getting off lightly in the downturn.
According to EU's statistics office, the economy of
the euro-zone countries declined by 1.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008,
which was even worse than the 1-percent fall in the U.S. economy during the same
period.
Germany, the largest economy in Europe, saw its
economy shrink by 2.1 percent in the final quarter of 2008.
