Brazil worries G20 impasse could spark trade war

BRASILIA, (Reuters) – Failure by the Group of 20  nations this week to achieve a global solution to the problem  of currency imbalances could lead to a trade war, Brazil’s  Foreign Trade Secretary Welber Barral said.

Brazil is working towards a multilateral resolution to  imbalances which have resulted in massive capital flows going  into emerging markets, boosting their currencies and making  exports expensive, Barral said in an interview late on Monday.

Attempts at restricting capital flows, such as those Brazil  adopted last month, have done little to curb large inflows of  dollars which are only likely to increase with the Federal  Reserve’s decision last week to pour an additional $600 billion  into the world’s largest economy.

Leaders of emerging market economies said the Fed’s move  made any substantive deal on cutting global economic imbalances  less likely at this week’s G20 meeting in Seoul, South Korea.

“Our proposals … are multilateral commitments. If (a  deal) is not reached there is a risk that every country seeks  individual solutions which can be costly for everyone,” Barral  told Reuters, adding these could range from currency to trade  measures.

Asked about the risks of a trade war, he said:
“If there is no compromise in Seoul, this could happen.”
World leaders may be able to agree to new financial  regulations and praise an IMF power sharing deal at a G20  meeting in Seoul this week, but tensions over global imbalances  and how to deal with them are simmering.

Countries around the world from Colombia to Japan are  acting to keep their currencies from appreciating as investors,  turning their back on low interest rates in developed  economies, pour money into higher-yielding markets.