The G-20 meeting has accomplished little to nothing toward resolving the global financial discord. One major stumbling block is the U.S. posture and neo-Keynesian approach to resolving the U.S. recession, stimulus ( government ) spending. As the main world reserve currency, the U.S. dollars use impacts global trade and the value of all other currencies in play. The U.S. posture and U.S. resistance to the regulatory approach favored by most European and Asian nations, is the harbinger of a prolonged global recession now cascading to depression.
Had the U.S. approached the G-20 with an open minded plan, some agreement may have been possible at the March meeting. Instead the U.S. appeared armed with Obama rhetoric and good will, but no acceptable "plan" to address world concerns.
In November, 2008, as the ugly head of recession was prominent in the U.S., common sense and straight forward suggestions were posed to the U.S. congress: Cap interest rates at 12 % simple interest per annum, 6 % on 20 year home loans; eliminate "day trading", and require that stocks be held for a minimum of 13 months; restrict commodities trading to end users only; limit financial instruments to traditional stocks and bonds; repeal Pub.Law 106-554(1)(a)(5) [ Commodities Futures Modernization Act ] and re-institute Glass-Steagall [ Banking Act of 1933 ] provisions. In addition, it was suggested to the U.S. congress, that there be modifications to the Federal Reserve Act of 1913, requiring among other things, that banks rates have a universal rate range of .05% and minimum reserve requirements of 20% be established.
Had the U.S. appeared and presented G-20 members with a "plan" based on components designed to stabilize financial markets, e.g., retail interest cap, central bank rate range of .05%, elimination of " day-trading" of stocks, and restriction of commodities trading to end users, there may well have been something concrete and tranquilizing emerging from the G-20, March, 2009, meeting. As it is, G-20 accomplished little except as a format for G-20 leaders to get to know President Obama. World financial markets remain in disarray, as the global recession deepens giving rise to political instability in certain G-20 participants. What a mess the U.S. Congress has gotten the world into.
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