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"China spends enormous amounts of money intervening in the market to keep it undervalued so what we have said is it is important for China in a gradual fashion to transition to a market based system," Obama said. The dispute is threatening to resurrect destructive protectionist policies like those that worsened the Great Depression in the 1930s. The biggest fear is that trade barriers will send the global economy back into recession. The possibility of a currency war "absolutely" remains, said Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega. Friday's statement is also unlikely to resolve the most vexing problem facing the G-20 members: how to fix a global economy that's long been marked by huge U.S. trade deficits with exporters like China, Germany and Japan. Americans consume far more in foreign goods and services from these countries than they sell abroad. The G-20 leaders said they will try to reduce the gaps between nations running large trade surpluses and those running deficits. The "persistently large imbalances" in current accounts -- a broad measure of a nation's trade and investment with the rest of the world
-- would be measured by what they called "indicative guidelines" to be determined later. The leaders called for the guidelines to be developed by the G-20, along with help from the International Monetary Fund and other global organizations, and for finance ministers and central bank governors to meet in the first half of next year to discuss progress.
Analysts were not convinced. "Leaders are putting the best face on matters by suggesting that it is the process that matters rather than results," said Stephen Lewis, chief economist for London-based Monument Securities. "The only concrete agreement seems to be that they should go on measuring the size of the problem rather than doing something about it."
[Associated
Press;
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