Toronto Star

G-20 finance leaders urged to work together for recovery

- NINIEK KARMINI

Countries must avoid tensions and co-operate to support a recovery from the pandemic as it lingers in many parts of the world, Indonesian President Joko Widodo told a gathering of top financial leaders of the world’s largest economies Thursday.

“The winter is coming,” Widodo said in welcoming finance ministers and heads of central banks of the Group of 20 industrial nations. “The pandemic is far from over, and the global economy is struggling. During this situation, no single country could recover alone.

“All countries are interconne­cted, no one is isolated.”

The G-20 financial gathering comes as many economies are treading a precarious path between raising costs of borrowing to cool inflation and helping to support recoveries from the pandemic.

Worries over potential conflict in Ukraine are an added unwelcome source of uncertaint­y, Widodo said, warning against antagonism­s at this time.

“It is not the time to create new tensions that could affect global recovery, let alone jeopardize the world peace as we’ve currently seen in Ukraine,” he said.

Officials were attending the meetings both in person and online, given troubles with travel and quarantine­s due to outbreaks, mostly of the Omicron variant of coronaviru­s, that are plaguing many countries.

Host Indonesia is among many countries in Southeast Asia that have endured severe waves of infections, though vaccinatio­ns have helped quell the worst of outbreaks.

The fourth-most populous nation with 274 million people, it has reported nearly 5 million cases and 145,622 deaths. In the past month, 690,518 new cases have been reported.

Speaking at a seminar on fortifying global health systems, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen noted that public health is vital to economic growth. She urged that countries step up in providing the $75 billion (U.S.) needed over the next five years to fill gaps in financing for better health care.

A fund hosted by the World Bank could channel investment­s to where they are most needed, she said.

“We don’t see this as a pool of money that sits idly waiting to respond to the next pandemic,” Yellen said.

Instead it would be used to fill existing gaps to prevent and prepare for future crises.

Indonesia is the world’s 10th largest economy and is located in the fastest growing region — at least before the pandemic swept the world, disrupting business and travel while killing nearly 6 million people.

Surging prices for food and energy are among the challenges the financial leaders confront as they discuss how to best nurture a global economic recovery, Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told G-20 participan­ts.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has forecast that world economic growth will slow to 4.4 per cent in 2022 from 5.9 per cent in 2021, following a 3.3 per cent contractio­n in 2020.

Mulyani emphasized the need for co-ordination between countries in different stages of recovery.

The U.S. Federal Reserve is pulling back on massive support for markets and businesses, preparing to raise interest rates as soon as next month to cool inflation that jumped to 7.5 per cent in January — the highest rate in 40 years.

Consumer prices rose to a record 5.1 per cent in the 19 countries that use the euro last month and to a nearly 30-year high in the United Kingdom.

 ?? BAY ISMOYO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Surging prices for food and energy are among the challenges the financial leaders confront as they discuss how to nurture recovery.
BAY ISMOYO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Surging prices for food and energy are among the challenges the financial leaders confront as they discuss how to nurture recovery.

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