Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Watch Video Support PBS Shop PBS Search PBS

Program
Support
From:
ABOUT US  |  LOCAL TV LISTINGS    E-MAIL   PRINT      
PBS NewsHour
TopicsVideoRecent ProgramsTeacher ResourcesThe Rundown: news blogSubscribe rss | podcast


REGION: North America
TOPIC: Business & Economy
Online NewsHour
UPDATE Posted: September 25, 2009, 12:00 AM ET    

G-8 Will Expand Permanently to G-20 for Economic Issues

World leaders plan to announce Friday the Group of 20 will replace the Group of Eight as the main forum for coordinating global economic policy, a reflection of the increasing importance of fast-growing economies such as Brazil, China, and India.
G20 Leaders; File photo.

The announcement comes as G-20 leaders gather in Pittsburgh to craft a new framework for global economic policymaking in the wake of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

"It's a reflection of the world today," a White House official told the Wall Street Journal on Thursday. "It's basically pulling international cooperation into the 21st century."

The G-20, whose membership ranges from China to to Saudi Arabia to South Africa, accounts for approximately 85 percent of the world's gross domestic product. Under the new framework, the G-8 - which consists of the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Russia - will meet primarily to discuss topics such as international security.

The G-20 will push to improve international economic policy by reducing the world's reliance on U.S. consumers, and boosting domestic demand in China, according to officials interviewed by the WSJ. Additionally, the G-20 will move to trim U.S. borrowing from abroad while encouraging more investment from Europe.

Shifting power from the G-8 to the G-20 has been a priority for President Barack Obama, who has questioned the G-8's suitability for confronting the world's economic challenges. Aides to the president characterized the most recent G-8 meeting in July as little more than a way station between G-20 meetings, according to the New York Times.

"We view this meeting and this discussion as a midpoint between the London G-20 summit and the Pittsburgh G-20 summit," Mike Froman, the president's chief negotiator, told the NYT at the July meeting of the G8.

In addition to announcing a new framework for global policymaking, G-20 leaders are expected to use the Friday finale of the Pittsburgh summit to introduce a range of other economic policy aims. Among those goals are a more aggressive approach to dealing with tax havens and possible guidelines for executive pay and capital requirements for the world's biggest banks.


---- Compiled from wire reports and other media sources

ONLINE NEWSHOUR LINKS

September 25, 2009
The Business Desk with Paul Solman

September 25, 2009
Making Sense

September 25, 2009
The Exchange

September 24, 2009
Lula: 'Blue-Eyed' Bankers and Emerging Markets

September 23, 2009
G-20 Leaders Urge Financial Reforms, but Dramatic Results Seen as Unlikely




CURRENT NEWSHOUR HEADLINES







LATEST BUSINESS & ECONOMY HEADLINES
In Ann Arbor, Michigan Finds Its 'Life Preserver'
Obama Offers Job Plan, But Deficit Pressures Rise
Patchwork Nation: Small Business Maintains Local Roots in Ann Arbor
The PBS NewsHour is Funded in part by: The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Additional Foundation and Corporate Sponsors
Program
Support
From:
Copyright © 1996- MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. All Rights Reserved.