Friday, October 10, 2008

We've Arrived

We've arrived:

G-7 Pledges to Take `All Necessary Steps' to Stem Market Crisis

By Simon Kennedy and John Brinsley

Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of Seven nations said they're prepared to take ``all necessary steps'' to unfreeze credit markets and prevent financial companies from failing.

``We commit to continue working together to stabilize financial markets and restore the flow of credit, to support global economic growth,'' the policy makers said in a joint statement after talks in Washington.

They also pledged to support banks important to the financial system and ensure that companies are able to raise enough capital to reestablish confidence. There was no comment on exchange rates in the one-page statement.

The policy makers from the U.S., Japan, Germany, U.K., France, Canada and Italy convened at the end of a week in which $6 trillion was wiped off investors' wealth and on a day that the Dow Jones Industrial Average whipsawed by the most in history.

``This G-7 meeting is a defining event and they have to do something really radical,'' Harvard Professor Kenneth Rogoff said in an interview before the statement was released.

The G-7 is under pressure to roll out new policies to quell the panic in markets after its previous steps failed to do so."

Rogoff makes the essential point.

On Coordination, which finally happened this week:

"Global Coordination

In the past two weeks alone, global central banks executed emergency interest rate cuts and pumped more cash into markets, the Federal Reserve said it would buy U.S. commercial paper, European governments bailed out banks and the U.K. and U.S. said they would start taking equity stakes in financial companies.

Money markets remain gridlocked despite those efforts as banks shun lending to each other for fear they will lose the money or because they need it themselves. The resulting jump in borrowing costs is now strangling consumers and companies, prompting Merrill Lynch & Co. to predict the G-7 economy will be the weakest next year since 1982."

There's no going back now, and, again, we were always going here, for good or evil. Start thinking about the ramifications.


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