G20 closes ranks but skims over toughest tasks

SEOUL,  (Reuters) – G20 leaders closed ranks yesterday and agreed to a watered-down commitment to watch out for  dangerous imbalances, yet offered investors little proof the  world was any safer from economic catastrophe.

After an acrimonious start, developed and emerging nations  agreed at a summit in Seoul to set vague “indicative  guidelines” for measuring imbalances between their multi-speed  economies. But they called a timeout to let tempers cool and  left the details to be discussed in the first half of 2011.

European leaders broke away for their own mini gathering in  the middle of the summit to discuss a deepening credit crisis  in Ireland. Euro zone sources said Ireland is in talks to  receive emergency funding from the European Union, in an  apparent deja-vu of Greece six months ago.

In a communique signed off at the end of the gathering  —the group’s fifth since the financial crisis exploded in  2008— there was a little something for everyone.

Leaders vowed to move towards market-determined exchange  rates, a reference to China’s tightly managed yuan that the  United States has long complained is undervalued.

They pledged to shun competitive devaluations, a line  addressing other countries’ concern that the U.S. Federal  Reserve’s easy-money policy was aimed at weakening the dollar.

In a nod to emerging markets struggling to contain huge  capital inflows, the G20 gave the okay to impose “carefully  designed” control measures.

They also agreed that there was a critical, but narrow,  window of opportunity to conclude the long-elusive Doha round  of trade liberalization talks launched in 2001. But there was no mention of Ireland, and financial markets  were unmoved by the bland promises to deal with imbalances.

“There is no good reason to think that any country will  actually do anything different as a result of the commitments  made at the summit,” Julian Jessop, chief economist with  Capital Economics, said in a research note.
U.S. President Barack Obama said some progress was made.
“The work that we do here is not always going to seem  dramatic,” he told a news conference after the summit.
“It’s not always going to be immediately world-changing.  But step by step what we’re doing is building stronger  international mechanisms and institutions that will help  stabilize the economy, ensure economic growth and reduce some  tensions.”

After weeks of verbal jousting, the United States and China  sought to bury the hatchet over rows about China’s  “undervalued” currency and the global risks created by the U.S.  printing money to reflate its struggling economy.
“Exchange rates must reflect economic realities …  Emerging economies need to allow for currencies that are market  driven,” Obama said. “This is something that I raised with  President Hu (Jintao) of China and we will closely watch the  appreciation of China’s currency.”

The G20’s accord sought to recapture unity forged during  the global financial crisis two years ago. But deep divides  meant leaders could not venture much beyond what was already  agreed by their finance ministers last month.

Negotiators had labored until the early hours of the  morning to thrash out an agreement their leaders could all  endorse, despite sharp disagreements that were on public  display in the days before the meeting.

“This hasn’t been a love-fest,” an official who  participated in the negotiations said. In particular, the leaders were unable to reach a consensus  on how to identify when global imbalances pose a threat to  economic stability. They merely committed to a discussion of a  range of indicators in the first half of next year.