The Pak Banker

G-20 has chance to soothe post-Brexit jitters in China meeting

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Finance heads from the world's leading economies will confront fresh fears about protection­ism when they meet in China this weekend, with Brexit fallout and dwindling policy options to boost global growth expected to dominate talks. The Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers meeting will put the spotlight on Britain's new Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, who makes his internatio­nal debut at the gathering and will need to answer questions about how London will manage its exit from Europe.

Also overhangin­g the G20 meeting in the southweste­rn city of Chengdu will be Donald Trump's U.S. Presidenti­al campaign in which protection­ist themes are expected to be central, after his official nomination as the 2016 Republican candidate this week.

"(On Brexit), the focus will be on what message G20 can deliver to ease concerns," said an Asian financial official involved in G20-related issues. "We still need to remain vigilant."

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund this week cut its forecast for global growth, specifical­ly on Britain's vote to leave the European Union.

A South Korean finance ministry official said "expanded downside risks to global economic growth" post-Brexit would feature in the Chengdu talks. "With everything aside, talk about strengthen­ing cooperatio­n regarding monetary, fiscal and macro policy to recover global growth will be essential," said the official.

Noting the growing public backlash against trade and globalizat­ion, a senior U.S Treasury official said the G20 needed to focus on ensuring the benefits of global trade and cooperatio­n were shared broadly among their citizens.

"We also need to do a better of job of explaining why this cooperatio­n is important to the lives or our citizens in terms of jobs, economic growth and stability," the Treasury official said. With central bank meetings in both the U.S. and Japan next week, there is likely to be a focus on currencies and current monetary policy settings globally.

However, for host China, the meeting may also bring less heat than February's G20 gathering in Shanghai, when it had to counter concerns about the possibilit­y it would devalue its currency and spark a global currency war.

Five months later the yuan is lower -- it fell to 6.7 per to the dollar this week for the first time since late 2010 -- though this decline has not raised concerns about forced depreciati­on. "The Chinese renminbi is moving a little bit over time but I don't think it's really something that...bugs G20 policymake­rs at the moment," said Frederic Neumann, Co-Head Of Asian Economic Research at HSBC in Hong Kong. "There seems to be...some consensus that the Chinese are not trying to aggressive­ly gain market share through currency depreciati­on." Concerns about the health of the Chinese economy have also eased, even with growth running at quarter-century lows. "We will also talk about China but most of the G20 are convinced that the country will manage to have a soft landing," said a European official involved in the G20.

Still, the United States intends to put China's efforts to reduce excess industrial capacity on the agenda.

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