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Finance chiefs face fresh crisis worries amid turmoil in Italy

Andrew Mayeda, Jana Randow and Yuko Takeo (Bloomberg)
Washington/Frankfurt/Tokyo
Thu, May 31, 2018

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Finance chiefs face fresh crisis worries amid turmoil in Italy Global finance chiefs are in crisis-management mode. (Shutterstock/File)

G

lobal finance chiefs will be back in crisis-management mode this week as the Group of Seven grapples with the market shock waves from Italy’s political woes.

Finance ministers and central bankers from the G-7 nations -- who oversee almost half of the global economy -- begin three days of meetings at the Canadian ski resort town of Whistler, British Columbia on Thursday hoping to stomp out a series of brush fires breaking out across the global economy.

The officials will be under pressure to show support for Argentina’s reform efforts, downplay the Italian crisis and commit to stemming the spillover effects from political instability.

It’s a more volatile picture than only a couple weeks ago, when US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s declaration of a trade truce with China looked to have removed one of the biggest sources of uncertainty over a broad global upswing. Since then, President Donald Trump has recommitted to slapping tariffs on Chinese imports and Italy has lurched into a political crisis that will likely lead to new elections within months.

“Whistler is going to be a far less easy summit than one would have thought,” said John Kirton, director of the University of Toronto’s G8 research group.

The meeting, which will help set the agenda for a leaders’ summit next week in Quebec, was initially seen as an opportunity to tout the successes of the global economic upswing, with the official agenda focused on promoting inclusive growth. The IMF projects the world economy will grow this year and next at its fastest pace since 2011.

But the sudden urgency to this weekend’s proceedings is a reminder of how vulnerable the global financial system remains to rising US interest rates and geopolitical forces, particularly the global surge in populism that is testing the world economic order.

The days leading up to the meeting have seen the political storm in Italy rekindle memories of the last euro crisis and triggered a flight from risk globally, particularly away from European periphery markets. Emblematic of the turmoil is the fact that Italy will be represented at this weekend’s meeting by low-level finance officials.

Investors have also been on edge in recent weeks over the prospects of emerging markets -- with Argentina and Turkey at the center of the rout. Argentina is in talks with a the IMF on a credit line or loan that would help the country halt a run on its currency.

 

All this comes at a time when global economic confidence -- and the Western economic alliance represented by the G-7 -- is already being severely tested by the US’s reluctance to embrace multilateral, rules-based trade.

The catalyst of much of the recent turmoil has been tightening US monetary policy, and the weekend’s meeting is the first official appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell at a G-7 summit. That will put him in high demand as counterparts seek to gauge the Fed’s plans and determine whether there is scope for coordination. Most other G-7 central bankers have held off from normalizing, or been scaling back intentions.

Higher US interest rates have sparked a fallout in every facet of global financial markets. In addition to putting emerging markets on the ropes, they’ve fueled a slide in the euro, prompted worries about the global debt overhang and triggered higher volatility in bond and equity markets.

Complicating the monetary-policy issue is the US’s growing deficits, which are set to be among the most contentious issues at the G-7 table. Most allies consider the stimulus as badly timed and unproductive. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who will chair the leaders meeting next week, said Tuesday in a Bloomberg Businessweek interview that US borrowing is not sustainable -- a position likely to be echoed by Germany, said Jean-Francois Perrault, a former aide at Canada’s finance department who has participated in G-7 meetings.

“In these meetings, the Germans are always, always talking about fiscal responsibility,” said Perrault, who is now chief economist at Bank of Nova Scotia. Officials are unlikely to make any headway on the issue however, he said.

“Nothing is going to happen on that front,” Perrault said.

The G-7 finance chiefs may also find it difficult to reach any consensus on trade.

The meetings should be a cool reception for Mnuchin as his government threatens allies with tariffs that have put the world on the cusp of a trade war. The Trump administration last week launched an investigation into whether car and truck imports imperil national security, a process that could lead to more duties on foreign vehicles.

Adding to the suspense, the meeting coincides with the June 1 deadline for temporary exclusions from US tariffs on steel and aluminum for the European Union and Canada. Even though the EU has said it won’t negotiate with the US until it has received an unconditional reprieve, Mnuchin can expect to face stiff lobbying from his counterparts to pare back protectionist steps.

"The good news for these guys is the global economy is performing pretty well,” said Nathan Sheets, chief economist at PGIM Fixed Income and former undersecretary for international affairs at the US Treasury. “Now the issues are focused on what are appropriate rules of the game; how should we manage our economies and especially how should we interact with each other.”The irony is the G-7 finance chiefs may find the most common ground around nipping any potential financial crisis, said Kirton.

“President Trump doesn’t want a financial crisis just before mid-term elections,” he said.

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