The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Putin yawns off Western baiting at G20

Abbott insists having robust discussion­s with Russian president on summit sidelines

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BRISBANE, Australia: A weary Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday shrugged off a new barrage of Western fire over Ukraine at a G20 summit where the world’s most powerful leaders vowed to heat up the cooling global economy. Host Tony Abbott insisted that everyone including Putin — who left the Brisbane summit early — was on board the G20 campaign to enact reforms that could infuse more than two trillion dollarsint­o the world economy.

“I ’m

I’m happy to be on a unity ticket with Vladimir Putin on that subject. Tony Abbott, Australian prime minister

happy to be on a unity ticket with Vladimir Putin on that subject,” the Australian prime minister told a news conference after the two-day talks, during which the two leaders put aside days of sniping to share a photograph with cuddly koalas.

Neverthele­ss, Abbott insisted that he had had very robust’ discussion­s with Putin in recent days and described the July downing of a Malaysia Airlines plane over Ukraine as “one of the most terrible atrocities of recent times”.

Putin broke protocol by delivering remarks to the media before the host leader’s closing news conference, and then flew out shortly before the summit formally ended.

He denied any snub to Abbott, saying it would take 18 hours to fly home via Vladivosto­k in Russia’s far east.

“Then we need to get home and return to work on Monday. There’s a need to sleep at least four to five hours,” said Putin, a judo black belt who prides himself on his stamina.

And the Russian strongman played down the testy exchanges seen in Brisbane, when at one point Canada’s leader expressed reluctance to shake his hand.

In general at the G20, Putin said, “some of our views do not coincide, but the discussion­s were complete, constructi­ve and very helpful”.

The G20 leaders backed efforts to close loopholes between different tax regimes that allow some multinatio­nals to get away with paying only a pittance on their profits.

Luxembourg is accused of having connived with such companies to the detriment of their home countries’ treasuries for years whenJean-ClaudeJunc­ker,nowthe European Commission president, was its prime minister. The G20 endorsed a “common reporting standard”sothatcomp­aniescanno­t arbitrage difference­s between tax regimes, stressing: “Profits should be taxed where economic activities deriving the profits are performed and where value is created.”

The Financial Transparen­cy Coalition, a campaign group, welcomed the G20’s emphasis on “the ravaging effects tax evasion, avoidance and money laundering have on our economies”.

But it urged tougher rules to make public who owns companies and where they are based - - a stipulatio­n that has stirred discomfort in China, where the issue of communist leaders’ personal wealth is a political livewire. The G20 countries, which represent 85 percent of global economic output, committed to structural reforms that would lift economic growth by at least 2.1 percent by 2018.

That amounts to more than two trillion dollars, although economists are sceptical that many of the G20 members have the stomach for such reforms when growth is already slipping in some key countries, including China and Germany.

Neverthele­ss, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde welcomed yesterday’s pledge while stressing: “Implementa­tion is now critical, with a strong accountabi­lity framework to monitor progress, supported by the IMF.”

Oxfam said the focus on growth should be allied with a focus on reducing yawning levels of inequality around the world, “to ensure the bottom 40 per cent benefit more than the top 10 per cent”. — AFP

 ??  ?? Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin

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