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G7 passes plan to ease credit woe

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  • G7 passes plan to ease credit woe

    G7 passes plan to ease credit woe

    BBC
    12-04-2008 10:31:45 - KarabakhOpen

    The G7 group of most industrialised nations has approved a plan aimed
    at easing the continuing crisis in the global credit markets.

    Including calls for more oversight of financial firms and greater
    financial transparency, G7 members have committed themselves to its
    implementation.

    The plan also aims to improve the work of credit rating agencies.

    The announcement was made after a meeting of the seven nations,
    including the US, UK and Germany, in Washington.

    "We remain positive about the long-term resilience of our economies,
    but near-term global economic prospects have weakened," said a
    statement issued by the G7 after the meeting.

    The plan further calls for the strengthening of authorities'
    responsiveness to financial risks, and puts in place arrangements to
    deal with stress in the financial system.

    It was drawn up for the G7 by the Financial Stability Forum (FSF)
    think-tank.

    The FSF is comprised of a number of central bank and treasury officials
    from around the world.

    "We have worked, and will continue to work, closely to address global
    challenges and take concrete actions," said US Treasury Secretary Henry
    Paulson.

    'Urgent action'

    Before the G7 meeting, UK Chancellor Alistair Darling described the
    credit squeeze as the "biggest economic shock" the world has seen since
    the 1930s Great Depression.

    He said the G7 had to take "urgent action".

    The other G7 members are France, Italy, Japan and Canada.

    The G7 finance ministers had gathered before World Bank and IMF
    meetings on Saturday and Sunday.

    The credit crisis stemmed from a slowdown in the US housing market and
    has had a knock-on effect worldwide and dented growth.

    Earlier this week the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast that
    the US would enter a "mild recession" in 2008 and said that the credit
    crunch could cost banks and other financial institutions around $1
    trillion.

    The weakening US economy has been a major factor in pushing down the
    value of the dollar, which slipped to a 15-year low against the pound
    earlier in the week.

    Meanwhile the pound has fallen sharply against the euro.
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