Visit Indian Travel Sites
Goa,
Kerala,
Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh,
Delhi,
Rajasthan,
Uttar Pradesh,
Himachal Pradesh,
Assam,
Sikkim,
Madhya Pradesh,
Jammu & Kashmir
Karnataka
|
Manmohan Singh asks G-20 nations to avoid competitive devaluation of currency | The Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, on Friday urged G-20 countries to avoid competitive devaluation of currencies at all costs and resist any resurgence in protectionism. Addressing the plenary session of the fifth G-20
Summit in Seoul this morning, Dr. Singh said: "Advance deficit countries must
follow policy of fiscal consolidation. This should be consistent with their individual
circumstances to ensure debt sustainability over the medium term." "While structural
reforms are necessary everywhere, these should increase efficiency and competitiveness
in deficit countries, while expanding internal demand in surplus countries. This
rebalancing will take time, but it must begin," he added. He said the exchange
rate flexibility is an important instrument for achieving a sustainable current
account position and the policies must reflect this consideration. "Recycling
surplus savings into investment in developing countries will not only address
the immediate demand imbalance but it will also help to address developmental
imbalances," he added. Expressing confidence that G-20 will be able to translate
the rich agenda before the summit into tangible outcome under the forthcoming
presidency of France, he said: "The G-20 was an apt response to an adverse situation
that the world faced." Dr. Singh further complimented the South Korean presidency
for the initiative it took to include development as an accepted item in the agenda
of the G-20. "The G-20 was born at the time of a crisis and as such it has been
preoccupied with the short term agenda of crisis management and global rebalancing.
However, one of the biggest imbalances facing us the development imbalance and
putting development on the G-20 agenda fills an important gap," he added. He said
developing countries performed well in the years before the crisis and have also
done well in subsequent years. "However, we need to ensure that the global economic
environment, including especially the environment for trade, and investment flows
remains strongly supportive of development," Dr. Singh said. Dr. Singh said the
Seoul Development Consensus and the associated Multi- Year Action Plans, which
are before the G-20 countries provide a comprehensive agenda with timelines, which
should be pursued in all relevant fora in the months ahead. "I am particularly
happy to endorse the focus on facilitating investment in national and regional
infrastructure projects and the call for establishing a High Level Panel to recommend
measures to mobilise private, semi-public and public resources for infrastructure
investment and to review MDB policy in this area," he said.
|
|
|
|
|
|