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The IMF will review the individual country data and submit a report that would form the basis for discussion at the June meeting in Canada. It is unclear, however, just how much teeth and detail the reports will have
-- given governments resistance to outside pressure to change their economic policies. "Harmonizing targets for these variables is a difficult enough task in one country," said Lewis. "It would seem well nigh impossible to accomplish the same feat for all G-20 members simultaneously." "I think everybody is on the same page, it's just that page is no longer marked urgent," said Peter Spencer, chief economic adviser at the Ernst & Young Item Club. "The issue is moved to how we are dealing with this in the long term to prevent a recurrence," he added of the task confronting officials meeting in St. Andrews. "As we've seen, it's very difficult to get any kind of international consensus on factors like remuneration and bonuses." There's also resistance to confront exchange rate issues, which could play a key role in correcting trade imbalances. While the weakness of the U.S. dollar and the strength of the Chinese yuan will almost certainly be discussed to some degree, the currency issue is not on the formal agenda of the St. Andrews meeting. Politicians and bank officials from big exporters, including China, that hold huge amounts of U.S. Treasuries as reserves have expressed unease with this situation as the value of their dollar holdings falters. The recent climb by the euro and pound against the dollar also makes Europe's exports more expensive, potentially harming recovery in the region. There is a growing push for China to unshackle the yuan from its dollar peg, allowing it to appreciate, while the dollar's role as the world's dominant currency has been under scrutiny. "It's a massive diplomatic issue that the Chinese are highly sensitive about," said CentreForum economist Giles Wilkes. The G-20 is comprised of Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United States and the rotating EU presidency.
[Associated
Press;
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