JUSTIÇA DE SÃO PAULO DETERMINA QUE O MUNICIPIO AUTORIZE A EXPEDIÇÃO DE NOTAS FISCAIS ELETRÔNICAS.
9 de fevereiro de 2024Por que Rússia deve crescer mais do que todos os países desenvolvidos, apesar de guerra e sanções, segundo o FMI
18 de abril de 2024European governments are running into initial resistance as they seek to use this week’s Group of 20 summit to turn early praise for their revamped crisis- fighting strategy into financial support.
The G-20 leaders convene Nov. 3-4 in Cannes, France, a week after euro-area authorities pledged to magnify the capacity of their rescue fund to 1 trillion euros ($1.4 trillion) and look beyond their borders for help in doing so as they combat the debt turmoil posing the biggest threat to global growth.
While the help of China and cooperation of the International Monetary Fund were immediately sought, pledges of hard cash are proving hard to come by as G-20 members press for more details of the plan. In an indication Europe may eventually prevail, an official in Brazil’s government said it’s in talks with Russia, India, China and South Africa — the so-called BRICS — about possible joint assistance.
“Unless European leaders can flesh out some of these details very quickly, it’s hard to see the rest of the G-20 coming on board with very great enthusiasm,” said Eswar Prasad, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a former IMF economist.
Crisis Talks
The Cannes talks will cast the G-20 into another round of crisis resolution three years after its leaders first gathered to address fallout from the failure of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. The officials — who represent industrial and emerging markets composing about 80 percent of the world economy — united again in 2009 to fight the deepest global recession since World War II and have since tried to rewrite the rules of international finance and rebalance global trade.
In a bid to revive that collective spirit, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy wrote to G-20 governments Oct. 29 to stress “a continued need for joint action by all G-20 partners in a spirit of common responsibility and common purpose.”
What started with Greece overhauling its budget math two years ago has become a headache for leaders worldwide as Europe’s struggles to stave off a Greek default and persuade investors that Spain and Italy are creditworthy threaten the global recovery and financial market stability. Forecasts due today from the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation may show the extent of that danger to G-20 economies.
Curbing Contagion
Amid intensifying global pressure, euro-area leaders last week persuaded bondholders to write down 50 percent of Greek debt holdings, pledged to boost the capacity of their 440 billion-euro European Financial Stability Facility and looked to bolster the capital of banks. Question marks linger over how easy it will be to ratchet up the EFSF and whether it’s large enough to limit contagion.
To lure capital for the EFSF, Europe’s governments said they would work “even more closely” with the IMF, in a statement released after 10 hours of talks ended Oct. 27. Within hours, French President Nicolas Sarkozy spoke with Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao. EFSF Chief Executive Officer Klaus Regling jetted to Beijing, where he mentioned on Oct. 29 the possibility of issuing bonds denominated in yuan.
The international response was conditional praise. U.S. President Barack Obama said the plan laid a “critical foundation” for averting a slump and should be followed by “full development and rapid implementation.” That stance was echoed by prime ministers Stephen Harper of Canada and the U.K.’s David Cameron.
Details Sought
Chinese Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said his government also wants to learn the particulars. Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan kept the onus on Europe to put up its own money, saying “in the first instance, any bailout fund in Europe is a responsibility of the Europeans.”
Japan plans to support the increase in the fund and also is awaiting information, a person familiar with the matter said. Brazil stands ready to help if its contributions are provided through the IMF or bilateral agreements, the official from its government said.
“Euro-zone leaders may be too confident they will receive financial assistance from the G-20,” said Karen Ward, a former Bank of England economist now at HSBC Holdings Plc.
The U.S. and U.K. want the European Central Bank to use its balance sheet more against the crisis, while emerging markets can’t provide enough of a firewall around larger economies and may seek to reinforce their own defenses against turmoil instead, she said.
‘Key Milestone’
While the G-20 summit will be a “key milestone,” any commitments “are unlikely to be crystallized” until the EFSF’s overhaul is finalized by the end of November, said Jens Larsen, chief European economist at RBC Capital Markets in London.
One idea is to use the Washington-based IMF as a channel for money for the enlarged fund. The EFSF may explore setting up a special purpose vehicle with the lender, Regling said Oct. 28.
While IMF resources would not be used, involvement with market intervention would be new territory for the Fund, which in its 65-year history has only made loans or acted as a trustee for funds lending directly to governments. The measure would need approval by a majority of the IMF executive board, which is dominated by G-20 members, with the U.S. holding the most sway.
The IMF has channeled money from selected member countries for specific purposes before. In the 1970s, oil producers contributed to a pool financing loans to economies hurt by the increase in the price of crude. Some members now chip into a trust fund that helps lend cheaply to the poorest nations.
War Chest
Another way to aid Europe is to increase the IMF’s $394 billion war chest, which the lender has already signaled may be insufficient to cope with a worsening world economy. That idea is splitting the G-20 as emerging market nations including Brazil support a boost, the U.K. signals it’s open to the idea and the U.S. plays down the chances of it occurring.
Whichever option is chosen, tapping China will come at a price that Europe may be unwilling to pay, said Miranda Carr, head of research at broker North Square Blue Oak Ltd. in London.
While China wants to stabilize the euro area as 21 percent of its exports go there and it owns 360 billion euros of the region’s bonds, the nation wants debt security and better access to European markets to buy resources and technologies, she said. Sarkozy came under fire from French opposition lawmakers yesterday for lobbying for Chinese help.
“There will be some quid pro quo on this,” said Mohsin Khan, a former IMF official now a senior fellow with Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. Large emerging markets “would like a bigger role in global financial governance and they will also see it as they are systemically important and they are doing something good for the world.”