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The final G-20 statement Friday endorsed the idea that emerging markets can protect themselves from the threat of such "hot money" by imposing controls on the flow of capital
-- a measure that used to be considered "a big no-no" and a violation of free-trade principles, says Homi Kharas, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. The trend is already starting. China and Taiwan this week announced new capital controls. The fear is that countries will take even stronger steps to give themselves an advantage, creating the risk of a currency or trade war. The U.S. House has already passed legislation that would let the U.S. government impose punitive tariffs on Chinese imports in retaliation for the weak yuan, though the Senate has not followed. Cornell's Prasad expects to see China and other countries impose tariffs and duties, subsidize their exporters with cheap bank financing or tax credits, bring cases against each in the World Trade Organization and use bogus health concerns to block some imports. In a sign of the United States' diminished clout at the summit, the U.S. could not even close a long-awaited free-trade agreement with close ally and summit host South Korea. The trade pact would slash tariffs and other trade barriers between the two countries. As the G-20 meeting closed, President Barack Obama and many other leaders flew to Japan for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Yokohama, Japan, on Saturday and Sunday. At the height of the financial crisis in 2008 and 2009, the G-20 nations tried to present a united front, agreeing to take steps to boost their economies, to reform their financial systems and to reject protectionist policies. But now that the world economy is growing again
-- and China and other emerging markets are booming -- "that unity has begun to dissolve," Prasad says. "The group is now splintering with competitive policies taking the place of coordinated policy actions." The result: "a situation ripe for conflict." The G-20 itself acknowledged the problem in its final statement: "Uneven growth and widening imbalances are fueling the temptation to diverge from global solutions into uncoordinated actions." But the go-it-alone approach, the statement concluded, "will only lead to worse outcomes for all."
[Associated
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