US sees G20 accord

Europeans demand tough rules

LONDON, (Reuters) – France and Germany joined forces  yesterday to demand world leaders deliver on pledges of tough  financial market regulation at a crisis summit, with French  President Nicolas Sarkozy saying “this is not negotiable”.

Keen to secure a confidence-boosting message for voters and  frazzled financial markets as the world succumbs to the deepest  downturn since the Great Depression, U.S. President Barack Obama  said there were no substantive differences with Europe.

Washington wanted tougher regulation too, he told a news  conference with Britain’s Gordon Brown, summit host.

It was not clear whether the flashpoint, which appeared to  focus primarily on Sarkozy’s demands for blacklisting of tax  havens, would be enough to sour the mood and compromise the  outcome.

Several hundred demonstrators clashed with riot police and  smashed bank windows in London’s finance centre ahead of the  summit.

Police said one person died during the protest. More  protests were planned for today, the main day of a summit  involving the world’s biggest economies, developed and  up-and-coming.

Global economic output will contract more in 2009 than any  year since World War Two, says the International Monetary Fund,  and IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn says the “Great Recession”  could cause 50 million job losses worldwide.

G20 leaders were preparing a major expansion in resources  available through the IMF, possibly including a tripling of its  war chest to $750 billion, G7 sources said.

Egypt’s finance minister issued a stark warning — people  will die in the world’s poorest countries if rich nations push  them aside in the scramble to escape the global economic crisis.

Developed countries are borrowing heavily on international  markets to fire up their economies, meaning poorer countries are  increasingly unable to do so, said Youssef Boutros-Ghali, who  heads the IMF’s policy committee.

The G20 leaders hope around two trillion dollars governments  are pumping into the economy in tax cuts, building projects and  green investments will limit the depth and duration of recession  and maybe create 20 million or so new jobs.

They were also looking to drum up more than $500 billion and  maybe substantially more in funding the IMF can use to bail out  economies which head into balance of payments troubles.

As the leaders dined with Queen Elizabeth at Buckingham  Palace, officials were hammering away at details of what they  would announce the following day.

Paris and Berlin fear the summit will fall short of the mark  on regulation of tax havens, hedge funds and markets in general,  and went in gunning for concrete announcements on that front.

“Any regulations we don’t agree here, won’t be agreed for  the next five years,” Merkel told a joint news conference with  her French counterpart. “The summit is not about horsetrading  between regulation and economic growth programmes.”

“In the results, we want the principle of new regulation to  be a major objective … This is not negotiable,” Sarkozy added. Obama, making his first official visit to Europe, said G20  nations were not going to agree on every point but brushed aside  suggestions the summit would falter because countries were split  over the importance of regulation versus new stimulus packages.

“The core notion that government has to take some steps to  deal with a contracting global market place and that we should  be promoting growth — that’s not in dispute,” Obama said.

“On the regulatory side, this notion that somehow there are  those who are pushing for regulation and those who are resisting  regulation is belied by the facts.”

The stakes are high, more so in the developing world.

Mexico’s central bank said it had asked to tap a $47 billion  International Monetary Fund credit line, the latest Latin  American country to seek help from the multilateral lender in an  effort to navigate the global economic crisis.

World stock prices meanwhile built on a recent recovery, but  worries over banks and growth continued to haunt markets in  Europe and analysts said many investors remained on the  sidelines, edgy over what message the summit would generate.

French President Sarkozy earlier threatened to disassociate  himself from any “false compromises” at the summit, the second  such meeting of world leaders to try to tackle the problems  created by the downturn and credit crunch, which in turn began  when the U.S. housing market collapsed over two years ago.

In a further sign of division, Japan criticised the German  approach. Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso was quoted as saying  that Germany did not understand the importance of fiscal  stimulus.

Brown stuck to an upbeat note, though. “We are within a few  hours, I think, of agreeing a global plan for economic recovery  and reform and I think the significance of this is that we are  looking at every aspect,” he said.