Obama and G20 may find common ground on regulation

Sun Nov 16, 2008 7:36pm GMT
 
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By Caren Bohan - Analysis

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President-elect Barack Obama stayed away from the weekend's global economic summit but had he attended, he would have found common ground with many participants who see lax regulation as a main culprit behind the deepening financial crisis.

President George W. Bush said the Washington gathering of world leaders he hosted was an "important first step" towards shoring up the ailing financial system and reviving market confidence.

The Group of 20 leaders from major developed and emerging economies pledged such short-term measures as fiscal stimulus to try to keep the global economy from falling into a deep slump and promised to look at ways to tighten regulations to prevent future crises.

But the summit put off the debate on bigger questions, such as how far the world should go in reshaping the financial system established at the end of World War II at the 1944 Bretton Woods conference.

Obama, a Democrat who will succeed the Republican Bush on January 20, opted not to attend the G20 summit, invoking the principle that the United States has one president at a time.

The next G20 gathering scheduled for the end of April -- when Obama will be in office -- could be more significant for charting a new course for the financial system.

OBAMA, EUROPEANS AGREE MORE

Obama is more aligned than Bush is with European leaders who believe the upheaval in global markets might have been avoided or at least tempered had there been better oversight and better global coordination on markets.  Continued...

 
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