Obama seeks rebalancing, Asia warns of protectionism

Sat Nov 14, 2009 10:11pm GMT
 
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By Bill Tarrant

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama called on Saturday for a new strategy to rebalance global growth, but leaders around the Pacific rim, gathering for a weekend summit, took aim at signs of U.S. trade protectionism.

Obama, who arrived in Singapore late on Saturday for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit, reiterated his call to redress the economic imbalances blamed by many for the global financial crisis.

The strategy calls for America to save more, spend less, reform its financial system and cut its deficits and borrowing.

"It will also mean a greater emphasis on exports that we can build, produce, and sell all over the world," Obama said in a speech earlier in Tokyo, his first stop on a nine-day Asian tour.

"We simply cannot return to the same cycles of boom and bust that led us into a global recession.

Fresh government figures on the U.S. trade deficit, which ballooned by more than 18 percent to $36.5 billion (21.9 billion pounds) in September, could add urgency to Obama's efforts to seek greater export opportunities in China and other Asian countries.

Leaders of APEC, a 21-member grouping accounting for more than half of all global output and 40 percent of world trade, began their two-day summit on Saturday before Obama arrived and resolved to exert more political will to jump-start the Doha round of global talks, a news release after the meeting said.

They also "reiterated their commitment to reject all forms of protectionism," the release said. The homilies on Doha and trade protectionism are the usual templates of the yearly APEC meeting.  Continued...

 
An employee takes gold ingots to be weighed in a room for final weighing and packaging at the Krastsvetmet plant in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk November 16, 2009.   REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
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