G20 Summit To Focus On ‘Currency War’ Threat To Economy

Photo Credit: naitokzJapan’s aggressive attempts to spur on its struggling economy were set to escape censure from the G20 nations today as bickering in Moscow kept alive fears of a “currency war”.

Finance ministers at the G20 gathering are understood to have pulled back from explicit criticism of Japan, whose prime minister Shinzo Abe has embarked on a huge programme of monetary and fiscal stimulus to jump start the world’s third largest economy out of its third recession in five years.

The currency market was thrown into turmoil this week after the G7 – the United States, Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Canada and Italy – issued a joint statement warning against using domestic policy to target currencies.

But the show of unity was immediately shattered by off-the-record briefings against Japan, which needs a weaker yen to help fuel its export-driven economy.

European Central Bank president Mario Draghi yesterday labelled the behind-the-scenes briefing as “inappropriate, fruitless and self-defeating”.IMF chief Christine Lagarde and Russia’s deputy finance minister Sergei Storchak also denied the ex- istence of currency wars, labelling recent swings in the yen as “market reaction to exclusively internal decision making”.

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