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G20 Must Take Radical Measures To Avoid Slump, Says Nick Clegg

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  • G20 Must Take Radical Measures To Avoid Slump, Says Nick Clegg

    G20 MUST TAKE RADICAL MEASURES TO AVOID SLUMP, SAYS NICK CLEGG

    guardian.co.uk
    Press Association
    Monday 30 March 2009 10.01 BST

    Liberal Democrat leader warns that failure to agree on immediate
    action could lead to a 'dangerous market stampede'

    Radical measures must be decided at the G20 summit or it could become
    the "fateful moment" when the global recession lurches into an outright
    slump, Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, said today.

    Clegg said the meeting of world leaders in London this week was one of
    "immense psychological importance" and warned that failure to agree
    on immediate action could lead to a "dangerous market stampede".

    Disunity could spark further panic among jittery markets, sending the
    world economy into "freefall" and raising the spectre of a 1930s-style
    depression.

    Speaking ahead of the gathering on Thursday, Clegg said: "A grand
    one-day summit cannot alone deliver us out of the global economic
    crisis.

    "But its timing, and the expectations raised, means that this week's
    meeting is of immense psychological importance. People desperately
    need to see that their leaders are able to work together, take radical
    decisions, and stick to a plan that offers hope.

    "If not, this summit could become the fateful moment when recession
    lurches into outright slump."

    He called on the G20 to convey a sense to the world that there was
    a way out of the current crisis or there could be "chaos" in the
    financial markets.

    Public disengagement from the political process could lead to a vacuum
    that could be filled by "populism, manipulation and hate", he added.

    He said: "There is a very real prospect that if the G20 does not
    agree immediate action that re-injects confidence into financial
    markets there will be yet another dangerous market stampede.

    "The nerves of investors and institutions have already shown themselves
    to hinge on the certainty provided by governments.

    "Disunity and half-measures could well spark further panic, sending
    the world's economy into freefall and raising the spectre of a
    1930s-style depression."

    But there were obligations on opposition politicians not to will
    negotiations to fail otherwise there could be a wholesale withdrawal
    from mainstream politics.

    He added: "We are at a psychological tipping point. History teaches
    us that economic meltdown can lead to despair, despair to fury,
    and fury to violence and extremism.

    "We are on the verge of a profound disengagement from conventional
    politics.

    And the space that creates is too easily filled by populism,
    manipulation and hate.

    "It is the responsibility of all politicians to stop this, and that
    means getting behind the G20 summit. Of course we must not suspend
    scrutiny and we must continue unequivocally to speak out for what's
    right.

    "But we must set aside the shallow wrangling. We cannot afford to
    undermine the G20, we have to make it work."

    Meanwhile religious leaders today urged the G20 leaders not to forget
    their commitment to the world's poorest people.

    In a statement, they called on politicians to pay special attention to
    the poor and vulnerable and state that "to forget their needs would be
    to compound regrettable past failures with needless future injustices".

    While acknowledging the "sheer complexity" of the challenge facing
    politicians, the statement called on them to restore "that lost sense
    of balance between the requirements of market mechanisms that help
    deliver increased prosperity, and the moral requirement to safeguard
    human dignity, regardless of economic or social category".

    Figures including the archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, the
    archbishop of Westminster, Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, the chief rabbi,
    Sir Jonathan Sacks, and the secretary-general of the Muslim Council
    of Britain, Dr Mohammed Abdul Bari, have signed the statement.

    Murphy-O'Connor said: "At a time of economic difficulty, it is
    important for all political leaders not to forget their promises to
    the world's poor. We pray for the poor, vulnerable and marginalised
    and also for the political leaders in their deliberations this week
    as we seek to create a more just world."

    Williams said people had high expectations of the meeting.

    He added: "As religious leaders, we shall be praying that these
    expectations will be met and that the gathered politicians will be
    inspired to share a word of hope with all of us."

    Among the 32 signatories are the chairman of the Christian-Muslim
    Forum, Dr Musharraf Hussain Azhari, the general secretary of the Hindu
    Council UK, Anil Bhanot, and the primate of the Armenian Orthodox
    Church of Great Britain, Bishop Nathan Hovhannisian.
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