by Ming Jinwei
BEIJING, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) -- The G20 summit, which
opens Thursday in the United States, will be an important platform for major
emerging and developed economies to coordinate actions to speed up world
economic recovery.
It is hoped the meeting, to be held in the
north-eastern city of Pittsburgh, will pave the way for a sustainable global
economic recovery, find a common voice against protectionism and gather momentum
to reform the international financial system.
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Pittsburgh's moden waterfront has become
a tourist attraction with its stadiums and arts centers.(Photo Source:
China Daily) Photo
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The
G20 summit, attended by leaders not only from major Western industrialized
nations, but also by presidents and prime ministers from important emerging
economies, has evolved into an effective and important platform for the
international community to coordinate efforts in battling the financial crisis.
The first G20 Summit dealing with the economic crisis
was held in Washington D.C. on Nov. 15, 2008 and the second in London in April,
2009.
At the Pittsburgh Summit, the international community
should continue to strengthen coordination on macro economic policies and make
more efforts to turn the initial signs of improvement in the world economy into
a more sustainable global recovery.
The world economy has noticeably improved since the
G20 London Summit, with increasing signs pointing to a possible recovery from
the worst global economic downturn since World War II.
However, many believe the foundation of the recovery
is rather shaky and substantial downward risks remain, with jobless rates in
major Western nations soaring to new highs, private consumption remaining
depressed, flow of credit improved but far from being normal and the prices of
commodities fluctuating drastically.
Both developed nations and emerging economies should
maintain their current macro economic policies and continue carrying out
measures to promote growth.
Governments should be careful when talking about the
so-called "exit strategy" some have suggested for scaling down growth support
policy packages to avoid sending the wrong signals to markets and undermining
the global recovery.
At the G20 Pittsburgh Summit, the international
community should also fulfill its commitment to fighting protectionism,
supporting free trade with concrete moves and helping negotiators conclude the
Doha Round as soon as possible.
The G20 leaders vowed to fight protectionism as early
as the Washington Summit and made the world believe they had learned from the
ugly trade wars ensuing from the Great Depression in late 1920s and early 1930s.
It is unfortunate to see protectionist sentiments
rising in many countries in the past few months. These pose a serious challenge
to the fragile global economic recovery.
With protectionist measures in many G20 nations, the
task of fighting protectionism has become even more urgent and important at the
Pittsburgh Summit.
Meanwhile, the Doha Round was meant to build a new
multi-lateral global trade framework. An early conclusion of the Round with
comprehensive and balanced results will boost confidence and contribute to the
global economic recovery.
The current crisis has exposed the inherent,
systematic flaws of the global financial system and the international community
should strive to improve their financial regulation to avoid similar
catastrophes.
Meanwhile, G20 members, especially those developed
ones, should fulfill their promises made at the first two summits to ensure
expanded representation and voting rights for emerging economies and developing
nations at international financial organizations, including the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
As for improving the global monetary system, G20
nations should enhance cross border cooperation on financial regulation and
crisis management.
The pay and bonus systems at banks and other
financial institutions, which many see as at least partly responsible for the
short-term, high-risk excessive speculation behavior that led to the crisis,
should also be ditched.
An international surveillance system should be put in
place to identify early and deal with the systematic risks within the global
financial and monetary system.
As some have said, the once-in-a-hundred-year
financial crisis could also provide a rare opportunity for international
cooperation.
Unlike the Great Depression, when countries tried to
contain the crisis with unilateral protectionist measures, cooperation and
coordination have become the consensus of the international community when
dealing with the current financial crisis.
The Pittsburgh Summit should carry this spirit on to
lay a solid groundwork for the world economy to return to prosperity as soon as
possible.
Special Report:
President Hu attends G20, three UN summits

Special
Report: Global Financial Crisis