Asia feels crisis and Brown seeks Gulf help
By Eddie Evans and Angus Macswan
NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - Two Asian powerhouse economies felt the sting of the global financial crisis on Saturday as India cut its main short-term lending rate and China said it was bracing for a slowdown.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown traveled to the Gulf in an appeal to oil-rich states to pour money into stabilizing the world financial system and help afflicted countries.
Other countries took steps to shore up their own economies. Russia moved 170 billion rubles (3.96 billion pounds) from a national fund to a state bank, and Russian shares rose in a special Saturday session].
And German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged German banks to tap a 500 billion euro (394 billion pounds) government rescue package. She and Brown will meet in London on Thursday.
The developments in the worst financial crisis in eight decades followed signs in the past week that world markets were stabilising, with interbank rates falling and U.S. stocks posting their best week in 34 years.
But in Shanghai, a senior Bank of China executive said the impact of the crisis on China has started to appear.
China has seen a sharp slowdown in industrial profit growth and fiscal income, Executive Vice President Zhu Min said.
The global economy will likely enter recession next year with the United States, Europe and Japan posting negative growth, he said. Continued...
The story of the decade?
The rise of China as an economic superpower was the most read news story of the past decade, surpassing the 9/11 attacks, according to analysis by a media tracking group. Full Article

UK
US