Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Other, traditional media outlets will provide you with more comprehensive coverage of the G20 meeting in London. While a lot of bloggers would have you believe otherwise, newspapers still offer the best access, authority and overall coverage of events like the G20. I have no illusions to the contrary. So over the next few days, I'll instead aim to provide our readers with some of the more interesting, hilarious and overlooked anecdotes of this important meeting.

-It is fascinating to watch the public relations machines in overdrive ahead of the meeting: downplay the differences (US, UK), demand your red lines are met 'or else' (France, Germany), the other side just doesn't get it (Japan), mumble about the dollar to avoid taking a vocal stance on the most controversial issues (Russia, China), sit back and avoid the collateral damage (everyone else). Summits are always about image/message management, and unfortunately only rarely about radical or decisive action. As a colleague noted to me this week, 90% of a multilateral summit is completed before the principals even sit down at the table (sherpas do the heavy lifting in advance of the meeting itself). Each leader knows this, and thus positions him/herself accordingly ahead of the final communique, speaking directly to their domestic audience. The fact that such deep divisions are so publicly aired ahead of this particular summit suggests that there will be few major breakthroughs in London. Regardless of the post-summit rhetoric, increasing the regulation of hedge funds, while important, isn't going to solve any of our most immediate problems. Increasing IMF funding would occur with or without this meeting.

-The City of London was fighting back!! ahead of the protests, although I wonder how many are actually hanging around Bank and Moorgate after work this evening.

-Dan Drezner's April Fool's Day joke would be a lot funnier if it wasn't so, sadly, improbable.

-For two leaders with a chilly relationship, Merkel and Sarko have forged quite the formidable alliance at this summit. This front was built on tax havens in Europe and seems to be carrying through quite strongly to global financial regulation.

-Sarkozy, in fact, claimed today that China was the main obstacle to a deal on global regulation, blocking a provision on...wait for it...tax havens (which, by relation, is an issue directly connected to hedge fund regulation). Who would have guessed that tiny alpine kingdoms, English Channel rock formations and tropical islands would collectively sink a summit? And does it not seem a little too convenient for China to be cast as the problem when such deep divisions exist between the US/UK and France/Germany?

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