European, Asian leaders agree on $80b fund to combat financial crisis
European and Asian leaders pledged united and bold action in combating the unprecedented challenges posed by the global economic crisis, as a major regional summit got under way here yesterday.
At the opening of the two-day gathering, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao made it clear Asia had heard the calls from Europe to work together in tackling the worst financial turmoil since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
"Asia and Europe should intensify coordination and cooperation to jointly meet global challenges," Wen said in front of leaders from more than 40 nations attending the Asia Europe Meeting (Asem).
Wen recalled the great benefits to the world economy and trade created by the ancient Silk Road that connected Asia and Europe hundreds of years ago.
"Today we must show even greater vision and foresight to bring about new achievements in Asia-Europe cooperation for the benefit of our peoples," he said.
In the first major coordinated Asian response to the turmoil, China, South Korea and 10 Southeast Asian Nations pledged to create an 80-billion-dollar fund that those countries could draw upon to fight off currency speculators.
Amid a seemingly never-ending stream of bad news about economies around the world punctuated by another horror day on Asia's stock markets on Friday, Wen and other leaders spoke ominously about the turmoil.
"The spread of the worsening international financial crisis has seriously affected international financial stability and world economic growth," Wen said.
In his opening remarks to the Asem summit, French President Nicolas Sarkozy called on Asia to support Europe at a crucial economic meeting next month in the United States where leaders will discuss ways to end the turmoil.
"When it comes to the Washington summit on November 15, Europe is going to present a united front and we will submit well-considered proposals developed together," Sarkozy said.
"Europe would like Asia to support that effort, so that together on November 15 we can tell the whole world that the causes of this unprecedented crisis will never happen again."
Sarkozy, whose country currently holds the rotating presidency of the European Union, is seeking to overhaul the Bretton Woods system that has governed international finance since the end of World War II.
But the United States has been more cautious in its approach, stressing the importance of preserving the commitment to free markets, free enterprise and free trade.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso told the Asem opening that the world had no choice but to unite.
"In the globalised financial market of today, we all need to be involved. Europe, Asia and the US and other financial partners need to work together to define and agree responses to the regulatory changes," he said.
The most concrete development of the day was the agreement by China, Japan, South Korea and the 10 Southeast Asian nations on the Asian pool of foreign exchange reserves.
The 80-billion-dollar war chest aims to save nations' currencies if need be, allowing them to dip into the pool of funds to fend of speculators.
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