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Thursday January 8, 2009

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Event Summary

The impact of the U.S. financial crisis has rippled across the globe, prompting concerns about the growth of emerging markets, the future for developing countries and the need for enhanced regulation and a new global financial architecture. On October 10, in advance of the annual meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, Global Economy and Development and the Wolfensohn Center for Development at Brookings hosted a discussion on the global implications of the U.S. financial crisis.

Event Information

When

Friday, October 10, 2008
9:30 AM to 11:30 AM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials


Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

The Honorable Wayne Swan, MP, treasurer of the Commonwealth of Australia, provided keynote remarks on “Adapting our Architecture to Challenging Global Times.” James Wolfensohn, former president of the World Bank, and chairman and chief executive officer of Wolfensohn & Company, provided introductory remarks. A panel discussion focused on the global impact of the financial crisis followed. Additional panelists included Brookings Senior Fellow Eswar Prasad, Brookings Senior Fellow and Director of the Latin America Initiative Mauricio Cárdenas, and Brad Setser from the Council on Foreign Relations. Brookings Senior Fellow Homi Kharas moderated the discussion.

Transcript excerpts:

The Honorable Wayne Swan, MP

“Blind faith in markets is of course no substitute for being hard-headed. And blind faith in complete regulation all of the time is also no substitute for being hard-headed. The answer lies not in more or less regulation, but in better regulation.”

Eswar Prasad, Senior Fellow

"Not surprisingly, the instinct of the average policymaker in emerging markets right now is to batten down the hatches, disappear into a deep hole, and stay there until everything blows over. But I think the time for that has past in some sense…"

Mauricio Cárdenas, Director, Latin America Initiative

"Certainly some countries will suffer more, Mexico and Central American being a case of larger impacts, but the region as a whole is a lot more resilient…"

Transcript

HON. WAYNE SWAN:  Domestic regulatory reforms in major markets and better cross-border coordination between national authorities are the bedrock of the future. We have to act on crisis protection, prevention, and mitigation. And that’s why we have been pushing in these forums for a strengthening of the global architecture for crisis prevention.

There is a key role for global institutions in detecting and responding to global problems. Relevant institutions must be able to identify and fulfill mandates that we have given them. To identify and respond to threats to global financial stability, in particular through an improved early warning capability. And as part of this, key emerging market economies, some of which are major lenders must have a voice in renewing the architecture and in devising crisis prevention measures. They must be involved. The globalization of financial markets means that all systemically important countries are potentially part of the problem and they must be part of the solution.

Participants

Introduction

James Wolfensohn

Chairman and CEO, Wolfensohn & Company LLC
Former President of the World Bank

Featured Speaker

The Honorable Wayne Swan, MP

Treasurer, Commonwealth of Australia

Panelists

Mauricio Cárdenas

Director, Latin America Initiative

Eswar Prasad

Senior Fellow, Global Economy and Development

Brad Setser

Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations


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