ROME, June 13 (Xinhua) -- The Group of Eight (G8)
finance ministers on Saturday agreed a set of common principles and standards
for propriety, integrity and transparency in a bid to regulate financial
institutions in a globalized world economy.
The ministers, meeting in the Italian city of Lecce,
agreed in the Lecce Framework that world economies "are in the middle of the
worst crisis since the Great Depression. The breadth and intensity of the
prolonged downturn have revealed the importance of strengthening our commitment
to standards of propriety, integrity and transparency."
They believe excessive risk taking and the violation
of these basic principles" contributed to undermine international economic and
financial stability. This occurred both in areas that relied on self regulation
and market discipline and in fields with formal rules and oversight, revealing
flaws in the functioning of markets."
For the market economy to generate sustained
prosperity, fundamental norms in economic interactions must be respected and the
magnitude and reach of the crisis has demonstrated the need for urgent action in
this regard, the statement said.
"Reform efforts must address these flaws in
international economic and financial systems with resolve. This will require
promoting appropriate levels of transparency, strengthening regulatory and
supervisory systems, better protecting investors, and strengthening business
ethics."
During their two-day meeting, the G8 finance
ministers discussed and agreed on the objectives of a strategy, "the Lecce
Framework," to create a comprehensive framework, building on existing
initiatives, to identify and fill regulatory gaps and foster the broad
international consensus needed for rapid implementation.
The Lecce Framework recognizes that there is a wide
range of instruments, both existing and under development, which have a common
thread related to propriety, integrity and transparency and classifies them into
five categories: corporate governance, market integrity, financial regulation
and supervision, tax cooperation, and transparency of macroeconomic policy and
data.
According to the framework, specific issues covered
include executive compensation, regulation of systemically important
institutions, credit rating agencies, accounting standards, the cross-border
exchange of information, bribery, tax havens, non-cooperative jurisdictions,
money laundering and the financing of terrorism, and the quality and
dissemination of economic and financial data.
The G8 countries are Britain, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, the United States and Russia. Italy holds the current G8
presidency.
G8 FMs call for continued efforts to deal with global economic
crisis
ROME, June 13 (Xinhua) -- The Group of Eight (G8) finance
ministers said on Saturday that they remain focused on addressing the ongoing
global economic and financial crisis and try to unwind new measures to boost
economic recovery.
At the second day meeting in Lecce, Italy, the finance
ministers said in the final statement that the developed nations "must remain
vigilant to ensure that consumer and investor confidence is fully restored and
that growth is underpinned by stable financial markets and strong fundamentals."
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