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Published byDouglas Manning Modified over 9 years ago
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Regional ‘THINK 20’ Seminar 23 May 2013 Heenam Choi Director General International Financial Policy Bureau
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1 Contents I.Preparation for the G20 Seoul Summit II.Outcomes of the G20 Seoul Summit III.Assessment on the G20 after Seoul IV.Expectation & hope for the Australian Presidency
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2 Ⅰ. Preparation for the G20 Seoul Summit The 1 st G20 Summit in a non-G7 and Asian country A year-long process carefully planned the Presidential Committee for the G20 Summit (composed of both government officials and private experts) constant communication with member countries (60 face-to-face meetings, video conference, teleconference) preparing for the events in previous (venue, transportation, security, media, delegation) Private sector participation (Seoul Summit emblem competition, 7,500 voluteers, Youth G20)
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3 Ⅱ. Outcomes of the G20 Seoul Summit Bridge-Builder between AEs and EMEs Legacy Agenda G20 Framework for Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Growth IMF Reform Financial Regulation Korea Initiatives Global Financial Safety Nets Development
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4 Ⅱ. Outcomes of the G20 Seoul Summit G20 Framework for SSB Growth Indicative Guideline : enhanced mutual assessment process Seoul Action Plan : each country’s commitments for SSB Growth IMF Reform under-represented and emerging countries quota increase shift of two chairs of advanced Europe to emerging countries Financial Regulation Basel Ⅲ, measures to better regulate SIFIs macro-prudential policy, EMDC issues, shadow banking
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5 Ⅱ. Outcomes of the G20 Seoul Summit Global Financial Safety Nets Key agenda as a non key currency country Agreement on enhancing the FCL and establishing the PCL Development Focus on the capacity building of DCs and LICs Seoul Development Consensus for Shared Growth
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6 Ⅲ. Assessment on the G20 after Seoul Recent criticism over the G20 “Premier forum of the global economic cooperation” VS “Glorified talk shop” What matters? Initiatives of the Chair are overemphasized (France: IMS, Commodity Price / Mexico: DRM, Financial Inclusion) Credibility is hampered by the delay of implementation (DDA, IMF quota reform, Quota formula review)
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7 Ⅳ. Expectation & hope for Australia Agreements at the previous Summits should be implemented The best way to gain credibility Views from AEs and EMEs should be reflected in a balanced way Legitimacy and representativeness of the G20 Communiques should not be lengthy, unfocused and issued too often Clear message to markets
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Thank you!
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