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Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Determined to avoid yet another G20 yawn-fest, the French are now threatening a walkout. Their finance minister has indicated that she will not sign the final communiqué should their demands for "deliverables" not be met (re: a global financial regulator, conceived and implemented by the end of the week).
Spicy stuff. I'm not familiar enough with international diplomacy to answer this with confidence, but is France operating on such a different plane that it can threaten not to sign the G20 document, sign the document four days later, and suffer no significant reprecussions? Because if not, it's not clear to me what this publicity stunt will achieve. If the leaders summit was going to agree to set up a global regulator, the G20 finance deputies and their sherpas would have already have laid the groundwork for one. The leaked draft communiqué shows no signs of any truly "global" regulator, only a more integrated collection of national ones.
So if the French aren't likely to get what they want by Friday, what do they stand to gain?
Labels: Financial Architecture, France, G20, regulation