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Obama has acknowledged that U.S. regulatory failures contributed to the crisis in the financial system, but urged a focus on solutions, saying "we can only meet this challenge together." He added that differences in the grouping had been "vastly overstated" and he played down an earlier U.S. push for bigger government spending by European governments; instead he praised their efforts. Brown foreshadowed agreement on issues including a possible $100 billion increase in financing needed to keep global trade moving, and support for economic growth and job creation. European leaders have balked at moving beyond spending measures already announced, arguing that their more generous welfare systems mean their spending level will rise as more people get benefits such as unemployment insurance. As leaders met in the Docklands, a former shipping area on the Thames river that was redeveloped as an international business center, protesters began a second day of demonstrations. Dozens were arrested in clashes on Wednesday. Security was tight at the summit venue; hundreds of police manned barriers and checkpoints around the security perimeter. Near St. Paul's Cathedral in the financial district, police and journalists watched as protesters played a giant Monopoly game. "The question is of course who has got the monopoly? It is fairly obvious the G20 are the global financial elite," said Clare Smith, 27. "Meanwhile the poor are getting poorer." Some 4,000 anarchists, anti-capitalists, environmentalists and others protested Wednesday around the Bank of England for what demonstrators had called "Financial Fool's Day." They repeatedly overwhelming police lines, vandalizing the Bank of England and smashing windows at the Royal Bank of Scotland. An effigy of a banker was set ablaze, drawing cheers. Police made 86 arrests.
[Associated
Press;
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