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The G-20 is trying to come up with a new financial architecture, having agreed at a series of summits in the United States and Britain since late 2008 on the need for tighter financial regulation to prevent the kind of Lehman-induced turmoil that could potentially sink the global economy. But agreement is far from certain on proposals for a bank tax, for setting new standards on how much capital banks need to protect against a future financial crisis and erecting "financial safety nets" to help emerging economies vulnerable to financial flows. The issue of a bank tax to pay for future bailouts has proved divisive. The U.S. and Europe favor the move, but others such as Canada and Australia oppose it given that their banks weathered the global crisis intact. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Wednesday he did not think the G-20 would agree at this week's meeting on the bank tax issue. But he said differences were narrowing in other areas, including capital standards. "We want to accelerate progress on a global agreement on core reforms," Geithner told reporters at a briefing in Washington before departing for Busan.
[Associated
Press;
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