G20 finance chiefs to warn of trade risks, differ on how
'pressing'
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[June 08, 2019]
By Francesco Canepa and David Lawder
FUKUOKA, Japan (Reuters) - Global trade
tensions threaten an expected pick-up in economic growth this year and
in 2020, a draft communique by the world's financial leaders showed on
Saturday, but the policymakers were divided on whether the need to
resolve them was "pressing".
Finance ministers and central bank governors of the world's 20 biggest
economies, the G20, are meeting in the southern Japanese city of Fukuoka
to discuss the global economy amid rising trade tensions between China
and the United States.
"Global growth appears to be stabilizing and is generally projected to
pick up moderately later this year and into 2020," the draft G20
communique, seen by Reuters, said.
"However ... risks remain tilted to the downside. These include, in
particular, intensified trade and geo-political tensions," said the
draft communique, which may yet change before it is released on Sunday.
The draft statement, to which all the G20 financial leaders have to
agree, contains a sentence in square brackets -- which means it was not
yet agreed -- that trade and investment were important engines of
growth.
"We reaffirm our leaders' conclusions on trade from the Buenos Aires
Summit and recognize the pressing need to resolve trade tensions," the
sentence still under discussion said.
If the sentence is dropped from the final statement, it would mean
rowing back on an agreement reached by G20 leaders last year in
Argentina that while the existing international trade system -- the
World Trade Orgnisation -- needs improvement, it helps world growth and
should be fixed.
G20 leaders also agreed last December to review the WTO reform in Osaka
later this month. But progress in overhauling the WTO, which still
functions under rules created a quarter of a century ago, has been slow,
partly because of U.S. actions to block appellate judge appointments.
A Japanese finance ministry official who attended Saturday's G20 session
told reporters that most of the group's members voiced concern that
escalating trade tensions posed a huge downside risk for the global
economy.
"With so many countries expressing concern over the fallout (from the
trade tensions), there seems to be some momentum to reflect that in the
communique. But there's no conclusion yet" on the language of trade, the
official told reporters.
[to top of second column] |
Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), speaks at the Group of 20 (G-20) high-level seminar on
financial innovation "Our Future in the Digital Age", on the
sidelines of the G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors
meeting in Fukuoka, Japan, on Saturday, June 8, 2019. Kiyoshi
Ota/Pool via REUTERS
KURODA HAILS MEXICO DEAL
Relations between the United States and China have deteriorated since U.S.
President Donald Trump in early May accused Beijing of reneging on commitments
to change its ways of doing business with the rest of the world. Washington
raised tariffs on Chinese goods and threatened new levies, while Beijing has
retaliated.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who will hold talks with China's Yi Gang
on the sidelines of the G20 gathering, said the United States wants free, fair
and balanced trade with China, in part to close a gaping U.S. trade deficit with
China.
But the United States is prepared to levy tariffs on virtually all remaining
Chinese imports if the "right deal" cannot be reached to satisfy U.S. demands
for better Chinese protections of intellectual property and curbs to technology
transfers and state subsidies, Mnuchin said.
"If we can't have that, the end result will be that my expectation is that many
companies will move their production out of China to other locations," due to
tariffs, Mnuchin said.
He said his scheduled meeting with People's Bank of China Governor Yi Gang will
not be a "negotiating meeting" on trade issues, reinforcing the view there will
be little breakthrough in the row between the world's two largest economies.
He added that any major progress will rest with Trump's expected meeting with
Chinese President Xi Jinping at a G20 leaders' summit late this month.
In a rare positive development, the U.S. administration said it will put off
imposing tariffs against Mexico after the two countries reached a deal to
contain the migration of immigrants crossing the southern U.S. border.
"It's a very good outcome not just for the United States and Mexico, but for the
global economy," Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda told reporters.
(Additional reporting by Leika Kihara, Jan Strupczewski, Tetsushi Kajimoto and
Christian Kraemer; Writing by Leika Kihara and Jan Strupczewski; Editing by Kim
Coghill and Richard Pullin)
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