WORLD> Global General
    Time ripe for tougher banking rules
    (China Daily)
    Updated: 2008-10-18 08:54

    LONDON: World leaders demanded tougher banking rules on Friday to protect economies from crisis before a meeting of US and French presidents that officials said would explore ways to reform a crumbling financial system.

    Not only is the worst financial crisis in 80 years helping push the West into recession, economies in eastern Europe are suffering, turning to foreign lenders to bolster their financial systems, while Asian nations struggle for their own solutions.

    To prevent any repeat of the crisis, French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said he would raise the prospect of a global summit to deal with regulatory issues at a meeting with US President George W. Bush on Saturday.


    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, October 17, 2008. [Agencies]

    The summit should make decisions on transparency, global regulatory standards, cross-border supervision and an early warning system, he said.

    White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said the meeting between Bush, Sarkozy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso was not connected to the global summit.

    But British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said they would discuss "urgent reforms of the international financial system".

    The post-World War Two financial institutions were out of date, he said.

    "They have to be rebuilt for a wholly new era in which there is global, not national, competition and open, not closed, economies," he wrote in the Washington Post newspaper.

    Britain's financial watchdog agreed, saying it was time for regulators "to wipe the slate clean".

    Adair Turner, chairman of Britain's Financial Services Authority, said the global banking system was past the danger of systemic meltdown although the world faced recession.

    "There's no chance of a 1929-33 depression. We know the lessons, and we know how to stop it happening again," he told the Guardian newspaper.

    Ukraine said the International Monetary Fund was prepared to give it $14 billion in credit, while Hungary slashed its growth forecast after agreeing a 5 billion euro ($6.7 billion) deal with the European Central Bank to keep euros flowing through its banking system.

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