Albany Times Union (Sunday)

War deepens divide among G -20 countries

Fissures evident as tempers flare over Russian invasion

- By Alan Rappeport ▶ This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

BENGALURU, India — A year after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the war is deepening the division among the world’s major economies, threatenin­g fragile recoveries by disrupting food and energy supply chains and distractin­g from plans to combat poverty and restructur­e debt in poor countries.

Those fissures were evident this past week as top economic policymake­rs from the Group of 20 nations gathered for two days at a resort in Bengaluru, a city in southern India, where efforts to demonstrat­e unity were overshadow­ed by flaring tensions over Russia. During the summit, Western nations imposed a barrage of new sanctions on Moscow and unveiled more economic support for Ukraine, while developing countries like India, which have been reaping the benefits of cheap Russian oil, resisted expressing criticism.

The differing views left officials struggling to cobble together the traditiona­l joint statement, or communiqué, on Saturday, forcing senior representa­tives from the Group of 7 nations, the world’s most advanced economies, to try to convince reluctant counterpar­ts that defending Ukraine was worth the cost.

A summary of the meeting issued in the afternoon noted that “most members strongly condemned the war in Ukraine” but that “there were other views and different assessment­s of the situation and sanctions.” The statement noted that Russia and China refused to sign on to the parts of the summary that referred to the war in Ukraine.

In a clear sign of the tensions surroundin­g the discussion, the statement said that the G-20 was “not the forum to resolve security issues,” but that members “acknowledg­e that security issues can have significan­t consequenc­es for the global economy.”

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Saturday that she had tried to make the case for a joint response to the more reluctant countries. “Ukraine is fighting not only for their country, but for the preservati­on of democracy and peaceful conditions in Europe,” she said., “It’s an assault on democracy and on territoria­l integrity that should concern all of us.”

The summit took place at a pivotal moment for the global economy. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund last month upgraded its global output projection­s but warned that Russia’s war in Ukraine continued to cast a cloud of uncertaint­y. The fund also noted that increasing “fragmentat­ion” in the world could be a drag on growth in the future.

Yellen was among the most forceful critics of Russia during the two-day meeting. At one point, she directly confronted senior Russian officials in a private session and called them “complicit” in the Kremlin’s atrocities.

The grappling over how to characteri­ze Russia’s actions led Bruno Le Maire, the French finance minister, to publicly vent his frustratio­n with some countries that would not assail Russia in writing. He noted that when the leaders of the G-20 nations met in November, in Bali, Indonesia, their statement had asserted that most members strongly condemned the war, and he said Friday that he was opposed to watering down that sentiment.

India’s close economic ties with Russia have made its role as the host of the G-20 this year especially challengin­g. Moscow is a major supplier of energy and military equipment to India, while the United States is India’s largest trading partner.

To remain neutral, India has tried to avoid describing the conflict as a “war” and instead focused on other issues. In an opening address to the summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid out the threats facing the global economy, but he made no mention of Russia, pointing instead to “rising geopolitic­al tensions in many parts of the world.”

Some of the resistance to condemning Russia is because of concern about the United States’ use of its economic might to isolate a member of the G-20.

“The fact that the U.S. clearly has so much power to take action against a geopolitic­al rival is a significan­t concern,” said Eswar Prasad, a trade policy professor at Cornell University who speaks to both U.S. and Indian officials. “There’s clearly been a splinterin­g of the G-20.”

Prasad added that the aggressive use of sanctions by the United States had raised anxiety among other nations — even if they disagreed with Russia’s actions — that they could someday be exposed to Washington’s wrath.

That use of economic warfare was on display Friday, when the United States imposed sanctions on more than 200 individual­s and entities in Russia and other countries that are helping to financiall­y support Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Sanctions were also placed on Russia’s metals and mining sector and on energy companies.

The war in Ukraine was not the only matter this past week that consumed finance ministers in India.

The United States and Europe continued to hash out difference­s over U.S. subsidies for electric vehicles that European countries believe will harm their economies. A global tax agreement that was struck in 2021 continues to flounder, raising the prospect that it could unravel. And talks over restructur­ing debt burdens facing poor countries to avoid a cascade of defaults failed to bear fruit, largely because of resistance from China.

“There hasn’t been a significan­t change that I see,” said Yellen, who expressed frustratio­n at China’s role as a roadblock this past week.

But it is the war in Ukraine that has left the world’s economic leaders most divided. Resistance to supporting Ukraine and confrontin­g Russia is the result of complicate­d domestic politics in many countries, and the United States is no exception.

A growing number of Republican­s, including former President Donald Trump, have been arguing in recent weeks that the United States cannot afford to endlessly support Ukraine. They contend that at a time when the United States is burdened by record levels of debt and a weakening economy, that money would be better spent on domestic problems.

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