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9/26/09

G-20: No Concrete Result - 'MORE BLA -BLA- BLA'

EU-Digest

G-20: No Concrete Result - 'MORE BLA -BLA- BLA'

At the conclusion of the two-day summit, leaders of the G-20 nations, comprised of the largest developed and emerging countries, issued a 23-page statement that promised, among other things, to fix problems in the financial system that contributed to the economic crisis. They stated they would discourage excessive risk-taking and reduce the chance of future financial meltdowns, the leaders endorsed practices to limit bonuses and to tie executive compensation to long-term performance. European leaders had pressed for pay caps, but the idea was resisted by the United States and Britain and was never on the negotiating table, officials said.

Bottom line: once again there was lots of talk, many promises, but no real results to report. No caps on bonuses, or specific regulatory agreements were announced. Climate Change Advocate Groups which had hoped that under the chairmanship of US President Barack Obama the Group of 20 summit might agree to set aside 150 billion dollars to pay for this work and convince emerging economies to sign the deal were also disappointed. The final summit statement agreed on by the leaders, however, was extremely vague on this issue and the specifics, with only a promise they would study the matter more carefully. Pressure groups were outraged, singling out Obama and Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel for particular scorn. "This is a crisis of leadership. The rich-country G20 leaders -- especially Merkel and Obama -- set themselves a deadline for a climate finance proposal, and then slept right through it," said Ben Wikler of Avaaz.

Mr. Sarkozy who had promised to go back home to France if there were no pay caps imposed on bankers bonuses, did not leave, even though the EU proposal for bonus caps was shot down by the US and Britain. Apparently, Mr. Sarkozy was pacified with the limelight given to him by being allowed to appear on stage with Mr. Obama and Mr. Brown on the unrelated G20 issue of Iran's nuclear proliferation problems. Mr Sarkozy and fellow political leaders remained in Pittsburgh for the full two days of the conference, which can only be described as another Bla-Bla-Bla meeting, paid for by the taxpayer. A sad state of affairs, as the worlds financial community continues happily on its unregulated path.

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