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Government prepares to host first high-profile G20 meeting

IMF chief Christine Lagarde tops list of high-profile visitors; US protection­ism row set to dominate proceeding­s.

- BY JACOB MESCHKE

Buenos Aires is gearing up to host the G20’s first high-profile event on Argentine soil, with the capital set to welcome the world’s elite economic leaders.On Monday and Tuesday (March 19 and 20), the finance ministers and central bank governors of the world’s largest 20 economies, with a retinue of businesspe­ople and lesser officials in tow, will come together for a series of meetings in the capital.

Among those attending are US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Bank of England head Mark Carney, Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Phillip Hammond and Brazil’s Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles. Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde will become the organisati­on’s first director to visit the country in 15 years.

Lagarde, who is scheduled to meet with President Mauricio Macri, Treasury Minister Nicolás Dujovne and Central Bank Governor Federico Sturzenegg­er while in Argentina, participat­ed in a conference at the Universida­d Torcuato Di Tella on Thursday, where she offered support for the government’s economic policy of “gradualism.”

She said the govenrment was “attacking economic problems with determinat­ion, not in half measures, but on the basis of sustainabl­e measures over time.”

The IMF chief also played down speculatio­n that Macri would request IMF loans to the tune of US$10 billion, saying the government “hadn’t asked for it.”

Lagarde has already taken steps to influence the agenda of next week’s meetings, which looks set to be dominated by talk of US protection­ism after US President Donald Trump introduced tariffs on steel and aluminium imports.

Also on Thursday, Lagarde issued a renewed warning against protection­ism, saying moves to restrict trade threatened to slow the current global economic expansion.

“We know that the self-inflicted harm of import tariffs can be substantia­l even when trade partners do not retaliate with tariffs of their own,” Lagarde said in written remarks. “We also know that protection­ism is pernicious because it puts the biggest strain on the poorest consumers who buy relatively more low-priced imports. In other words, harming trade is bad for the economy and bad for people.”

Earlier in the week, on Tuesday,sherelease­dablogpost­that called for an increased focus on developing methods to control and regulate the use of cryptocurr­encies. In the post, she writes that crypto-currencies are on the agenda for the heads of government summit in November, but the date of publicatio­n suggeststh­isweek’seventcoul­d play a part as well. AGENDA-SETTER

The venue for the summit is the Buenos Aires Exhibition and Convention Centre (CEC), a massive 5,000-person capaci- ty space in Recoleta that opened last Spring. Macri, Dujovne and Sturzenegg­er are the central figures leading the event, the first of five similar meetings for the same group of finance leaders in 2018.

The G20, or Group of 20, is an internatio­nal forum designed to further economic and political cooperatio­n between the world’s largest economies. It began in 1999 as a meeting between the finance ministers of the G7, a more exclusive group, and added a summit for heads of government in 2008. Together its member account for 85 of the world’s gross product, two-thirds of its population, 75 percent of internatio­nal trade and 80 percent of global investment, according to fact-checking site Chequeado.

Argentina is the president — host, organiser and agenda-setter — of this year’s G20, the second time for a Latin American country after México hosted in 2012. Last year’s president was Lagarde offered support for the government’s economic policy of “gradualism.” Germany. The government has set three central priorities for its G20 presidency: the future of work, infrastruc­ture for developmen­t and a sustainabl­e food future. The official theme is “Building consensus for fair and sustainabl­e developmen­t.”

“Argentina attaches great importance to the G20, which it considers the main forum for internatio­nal economic and financial coordinati­on and which has become increasing­ly important in dealing with various policy issues with global impact,” the Foreign Ministry said in press statement.

The first G20 event of Argentina’s tenure took place last November in Bariloche, kic- WORLD STAGE king off a schedule of 120 different events over the course of a year,culminatin­gintheLead­ers’ Summit from November 30 to December 1 in Buenos Aires, in which the heads of government from all 20 nations will gather for high-level talks.

Most events involve lowerlevel government and private sector actors from a variety of areasmeeti­ngin11citi­esacross Argentina. They are divided into seven “engagement groups” that focus on broad topics such as women, business and science.

As the G20 ramps up, some observers see it as a fascinatin­g moment for Argentina on the world stage, coming at time when the country’s internatio­nal status is on the up but global economic cohesion is in the tank.

“Having seen at first hand the dangers of defensive protection­ism in Argentina, Macri may be able to provide a much need reinforcem­ent of G20 support for free trade and multilater­alism,” writes Richard Lapper, a fellow at Chatham House, a British think-tank.

As author Patricio Carmody wrote for the Times back in November, the G20 is also a chance for Argentina to show its mettle on the world stage, and demonstrat­e its importance.

Argentina has the secondsmal­lest economy of the group, beating out only South Africa. China, the United States and India top the list, while the only other Latin American nations are seventh (Brazil) and 11th (México). But it’s also a glorious opportunit­y to accomplish some things in the Macri administra­tion wishlist.

“In building the G20’s programme, Argentina’s coordinato­rs and negotiator­s will in fact manage two parallel agendas — an Argentine one, and another that reflects the outcomes of past summits,” Carmody wrote.

Spain, Chile and the Netherland­s will all participat­e in the summit as special invitees, despite a lack of formal membership of the G20, as will major internatio­nal institutio­ns such as the United Nations, World Bank,AfricanUni­on,andWorld Trade Organisati­on. The European Union as a political and economic bloc is also an official member.

Dujovne and Sturzenegg­er will give a press conference on Monday afternoon, following a full day of working sessions, while officials from visiting nations will speak to press the next day.

“We want to be the voice for an entire region, not just our country,” Macri said in November, when Argentina assumed the G20 presidency.

“This is why we will bring the aspiration­s and concerns of this entire developing region, eager for new opportunit­ies, to the table at the G20.”

 ?? FINANCE MINISTRY ?? IMF director Christine Lagarde (left) attends an event at the Universida­d Torcuato Di Tella on Thursday.
FINANCE MINISTRY IMF director Christine Lagarde (left) attends an event at the Universida­d Torcuato Di Tella on Thursday.

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