Europe

Commonwealth Finance ministers to meet in Washington in October

Finance ministers from Commonwealth countries— across Africa, Asia, The Caribbean, Europe, North America and the Pacific – will meet in Washington DC on 8 October 2010 to map out strategies for continuing to deal with the impact of the global economic crisis.

The meeting, which takes place during the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, will be held in the IMF’s HQ1 building.

Speaking ahead of the meeting, Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma said that one of the issues that Ministers will discuss is the potential relationship between the Commonwealth and the G20.

“The G20 has been established at leaders’ level for almost two years now, as a framework of global governance.  But it can only represent a part of global public opinion” Mr Sharma said.

 Five of the Commonwealth members are in the G20, but 49 are not.  There is a ‘G172’ of those countries which do not sit at its table.  But in a Commonwealth meeting, we are able to bring together those inside it and outside it, to express and discuss mutual concerns.”

Ministers will also discuss ways of promoting environmentally sustainable growth, as well as addressing the challenges of small and vulnerable states in managing their debt.

“For many years, it has been clear that a growing number of small states have seen rising and increasingly unsustainable levels of domestic and external debt.  In Washington, we will discuss the policy options to address this challenge, including innovative approaches to sustainable debt management,” the Secretary-General said.

 About the Commonwealth:

The Commonwealth is an association of fifty-four countries that support each other and work together towards shared goals in democracy and development. It includes very small countries and very large countries, small island states and larger landlocked countries.  It spans five continents from Africa to Asia, the Americas, the Caribbean, Europe and, the South Pacific.  The organization assists countries with international trade, debt, finance, economic and legal advice.

This is the list of Commonwealth countries:  Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, The Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belize, Botswana, Brunei Darussalam, Cameroon, Canada, Cyprus, Dominica, Fiji Islands*, The Gambia, Ghana, Grenada, Guyana, India, Jamaica, Kenya, Kiribati, Lesotho, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Malta, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Nauru**, New Zealand, Nigeria, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Rwanda, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Solomon Islands, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Swaziland, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Tuvalu, Uganda, United Kingdom, United Republic of Tanzania, Vanuatu and Zambia. 

 Fiji Islands was fully suspended from membership of the Commonwealth on 1 September 2009 pending restoration of a democratically elected government. Nauru is a member in arrears.

 

Julius Mucunguzi

Communications Officer

Communications & Public Affairs Division

 

 

 

 

 

Financial Sheriffs to Monitor Banks, Markets in European Union

When the financial crisis erupted two years ago, toppling banks and triggering eye-watering bailouts, European policymakers at times seemed too stunned by the scale of the situation to think about how to prevent it from happening again. Recently, though, they seem to have recovered their composure and have devised a body of legislation to anticipate future financial turmoil. Two months after U.S. President Barack Obama signed into law the most sweeping reform of America's financial sector since the 1930s, the European Union is set to follow suit by creating a trio of new financial sheriffs to monitor banks, insurance companies and trading on markets.

The European Banking Authority will be based in London; Paris will host the European Securities and Markets Authority; and the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority will be in Frankfurt. On Tuesday, Sept. 7, E.U. Finance Ministers confirmed the plans for the watchdogs; the European Parliament will vote on them later this month, and the three agencies should come into force on Jan. 1 next year. (See pictures of the global financial crisis.)

E.U. Internal Market Commissioner Michel Barnier says the agencies will give Europe "the control tower and the radar screens needed to identify risks, the tools to better control financial players and the means to act quickly, in a coordinated way, in a timely fashion." Barnier said last week that the financial crisis revealed woeful communication gaps between Europe's national regulators. "The fact is that we did not see the crisis coming," he said. "We did not have the monitoring tools to detect the risk which was accumulating across the system. And when the crisis hit, we did not have effective tools to act."

The new agencies will have the power to temporarily ban certain high-risk financial products and activities - such as naked short selling, which Germany acted against earlier this year - as well as to instruct banks and other financial actors in crisis situations, draw up standards for national regulators and settle disagreements between them.

They will be complemented by a group attached to the Frankfurt-based European Central Bank called the European Systemic Risk Board, which will monitor the risk of major threats to the economy, like problems at major banks or asset bubbles. Further initiatives are also in the works: speaking at a conference in Italy over the weekend, Barnier said the E.U. could agree in the next few weeks on a law to regulate speculative hedge funds and private-equity operators, blamed by some for financial excesses. (See the worst business deals of 2009.)

The wave of regulation finds Europe a far cry from the heady days just a few years ago, when banks and investors were the toast of European governments for their seeming alchemic powers of money generation. But the financial crisis has changed the perspective, says Fabian Zuleeg, chief economist at the European Policy Center, a Brussels-based think tank. "Given the deep distrust of much of the financial sector, there is no longer a debate over whether or not to introduce stronger regulation," he says.

When the watchdogs were first proposed last year, the only real resistance came from the City of London, Europe's biggest financial center, where some banks raised fears that too much red tape could prompt leading firms to move out of the E.U. altogether. But even among the City's supporters, there is a growing recognition that the crisis exposed the fault lines in the Anglo-Saxon model and left the wider economy distorted by the size and power of the banks. Angela Knight, CEO of the British Bankers' Association (BBA), says the financial sector welcomes the measures. "We need better regulatory coordination and a common rulebook," she says. "Although, of course, we do need to watch carefully to see that this does not lead to overregulation." (See 10 things to do in London.)

She is echoed by Guido Ravoet, secretary general of the European Banking Federation. "We do need more banking supervision. We recognize that we need oversight. We accept that there were gaps in the regulation," he says, pointing out that large banks - like HSBC, BNP Paribas Fortis and Deutsche Bank - had long asked for a single rulebook for cross-border operations. "The new measures might not prevent future crises, but they will predict them earlier and mitigate risks in the future," he says.

Initially, the watchdogs will not be as powerful as, say, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. They are expected to be manned next year by no more than 60 people each, compared with more than 3,000 people at the U.K.'s Financial Services Authority, and will depend on help from national supervisory agencies. But it is a major step nonetheless, says Karel Lannoo of the Center for European Policy Studies in Brussels. "This is a very important, historic move. It was long overdue to have some sort of European supervision, and we now have federal bodies with powers above the national authorities," Lannoo says. "We will never abolish a financial crisis, but we can avoid the confusion we had two years ago." That may seem a modest ambition, but with Europe struggling to recover from the last crisis, a little local policing could do a world of good.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Financial Sheriffs to Monitor Banks, Markets in European Union

When the financial crisis erupted two years ago, toppling banks and triggering eye-watering bailouts, European policymakers at times seemed too stunned by the scale of the situation to think about how to prevent it from happening again. Recently, though, they seem to have recovered their composure and have devised a body of legislation to anticipate future financial turmoil. Two months after U.S. President Barack Obama signed into law the most sweeping reform of America's financial sector since the 1930s, the European Union is set to follow suit by creating a trio of new financial sheriffs to monitor banks, insurance companies and trading on markets.

The European Banking Authority will be based in London; Paris will host the European Securities and Markets Authority; and the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority will be in Frankfurt. On Tuesday, Sept. 7, E.U. Finance Ministers confirmed the plans for the watchdogs; the European Parliament will vote on them later this month, and the three agencies should come into force on Jan. 1 next year. (See pictures of the global financial crisis.)

E.U. Internal Market Commissioner Michel Barnier says the agencies will give Europe "the control tower and the radar screens needed to identify risks, the tools to better control financial players and the means to act quickly, in a coordinated way, in a timely fashion." Barnier said last week that the financial crisis revealed woeful communication gaps between Europe's national regulators. "The fact is that we did not see the crisis coming," he said. "We did not have the monitoring tools to detect the risk which was accumulating across the system. And when the crisis hit, we did not have effective tools to act."

The new agencies will have the power to temporarily ban certain high-risk financial products and activities - such as naked short selling, which Germany acted against earlier this year - as well as to instruct banks and other financial actors in crisis situations, draw up standards for national regulators and settle disagreements between them.

They will be complemented by a group attached to the Frankfurt-based European Central Bank called the European Systemic Risk Board, which will monitor the risk of major threats to the economy, like problems at major banks or asset bubbles. Further initiatives are also in the works: speaking at a conference in Italy over the weekend, Barnier said the E.U. could agree in the next few weeks on a law to regulate speculative hedge funds and private-equity operators, blamed by some for financial excesses. (See the worst business deals of 2009.)

The wave of regulation finds Europe a far cry from the heady days just a few years ago, when banks and investors were the toast of European governments for their seeming alchemic powers of money generation. But the financial crisis has changed the perspective, says Fabian Zuleeg, chief economist at the European Policy Center, a Brussels-based think tank. "Given the deep distrust of much of the financial sector, there is no longer a debate over whether or not to introduce stronger regulation," he says.

When the watchdogs were first proposed last year, the only real resistance came from the City of London, Europe's biggest financial center, where some banks raised fears that too much red tape could prompt leading firms to move out of the E.U. altogether. But even among the City's supporters, there is a growing recognition that the crisis exposed the fault lines in the Anglo-Saxon model and left the wider economy distorted by the size and power of the banks. Angela Knight, CEO of the British Bankers' Association (BBA), says the financial sector welcomes the measures. "We need better regulatory coordination and a common rulebook," she says. "Although, of course, we do need to watch carefully to see that this does not lead to overregulation." (See 10 things to do in London.)

She is echoed by Guido Ravoet, secretary general of the European Banking Federation. "We do need more banking supervision. We recognize that we need oversight. We accept that there were gaps in the regulation," he says, pointing out that large banks - like HSBC, BNP Paribas Fortis and Deutsche Bank - had long asked for a single rulebook for cross-border operations. "The new measures might not prevent future crises, but they will predict them earlier and mitigate risks in the future," he says.

Initially, the watchdogs will not be as powerful as, say, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. They are expected to be manned next year by no more than 60 people each, compared with more than 3,000 people at the U.K.'s Financial Services Authority, and will depend on help from national supervisory agencies. But it is a major step nonetheless, says Karel Lannoo of the Center for European Policy Studies in Brussels. "This is a very important, historic move. It was long overdue to have some sort of European supervision, and we now have federal bodies with powers above the national authorities," Lannoo says. "We will never abolish a financial crisis, but we can avoid the confusion we had two years ago." That may seem a modest ambition, but with Europe struggling to recover from the last crisis, a little local policing could do a world of good.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

HIV: Finally, Positive Results from a Microbicide Trial

The HIV prevention world is abuzz with excitement following news of the first clinical evidence that a vaginal gel - known as a microbicide - can help to prevent sexual transmission of HIV infection.

A study by the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA) found that a vaginal gel containing the antiretroviral (ARV) drug tenofovir was 39 percent effective in reducing a woman's HIV risk when used for about three-quarters of sex acts and 54 percent effective when used more consistently. It also halved the incidence of genital herpes infections.

 

 

 

 

“Tenofovir gel could fill an important HIV prevention gap by empowering women who are unable to successfully negotiate mutual faithfulness or condom use with their male partners,” said Quarraisha Abdool Karim, one of the lead investigators of the study and associate director of Caprisa. “This new technology has the potential to alter the course of the HIV epidemic, especially in southern Africa where young women bear the brunt of this devastating disease.”

More than half of new HIV infections in Africa occur in women and girls. The CAPRISA study findings are likely to revive flagging morale among researchers disappointed by two decades of failed efforts to develop a female-controlled method of HIV prevention.

“We are giving hope to women. For the first time we have seen results for a woman-initiated and controlled HIV prevention option,” Michel Sidibé, executive director of UNAIDS, said in a statement. “If confirmed, a microbicide will be a powerful option for the prevention revolution and help us break the trajectory of the AIDS epidemic.” 

Funded by the US and South African governments, the CAPRISA trial involved 889 HIV-negative, sexually active South African women who were considered to be at high risk of HIV infection. Half of the women were given vaginal applicators containing a 1 percent concentration of tenofovir gel, while the other half were given a placebo gel. The women were asked to insert a dose of the gel 12 hours before sexual intercourse and a second dose within 12 hours after intercourse. 

Over the course of the year-long study, 98 women became HIV positive - 38 in the tenofovir gel group compared to 60 in the placebo gel group. On average, adherence to the gel was over 70 percent, but among women who used the tenofovir gel for more than 80 percent of sex acts the gel provided greater protection from HIV. 

"We believe that the most responsible plan of action now is to quickly and efficiently articulate the sequence of steps necessary for confirmation and follow-up of these results, while also aggressively planning for potential roll-out of a licensable product," Mitchell Warren, executive director of the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, said in a statement. 

"As exciting as this result is - and as important as it is to follow it up without delay - the reality is that this product will not be available for widespread introduction tomorrow,” Mitchell cautioned. “It is critical to manage expectations while maintaining urgency.” 

 

 

Europe gets better debt news from Germany, Spain, ap

Europe got scraps of positive news Thursday in its battle to overcome a government debt crisis, as Germany cut its budget deficit forecast, Spain received strong interest for a bond auction and a eurozone rescue fund received its final approval vote.

Germany cut its 2010 deficit prediction to 4.5 percent from 5.5 percent, a sign that Europe's largest economy is making progress in strengthening its government finances, though it was already one of the stronger cases.

It also said it expects its deficit to drop to 3 percent, the maximum allowed under European Union rules, in 2012. It had long pledged to get the shortfall below that level by 2013.

The Finance Ministry pointed to lower spending on benefits as a result of moderate unemployment, as well as a higher tax take and proceeds from an auction of cell phone frequencies. With the economy growing, that has allowed it to reduce its plans for new borrowing this year.

Spain, a recent focus of market concern, raised nearly euro3 billion ($3.85 billion) in 15-year bonds Thursday. Demand was more than double the amount on offer — helping allay fears that Spain, like Greece, may have to seek a bailout.

"This result confirms that appetite for Spanish paper is alive," analysts at UniCredit Research said, adding that it was "a remarkable result."

Along with others in the 16-nation eurozone, Germany and Spain have embarked on austerity drives in the wake of the debt crisis that started in Greece and concentrated market attention on European public finances.

That crisis culminated in May's agreement on a euro750 billion ($950 billion) financial rescue package that can be tapped if other indebted EU nations need help.

The newly elected center-right coalition government in Bratislava initially balked at paying Slovakia's euro4.37 billion share. However, it signed up on Thursday, and the deal now goes to parliament for approval.

The government did, however, reject paying Slovakia's euro800 million share — less than 1 percent — of a separate euro110 billion rescue package from eurozone partners and the International Monetary Fund for Greece.

Athens narrowly avoided default in May when it received the first installment of the package.

Greek banks took steps Thursday to consolidate the country's financial sector. The private Piraeus Bank offered to buy stakes in two state-controlled banks, ATEBank and Hellenic Postbank — a move that comes after Greece's finance minister said there is an urgent need for Greek banks to consider mergers.

The proposal "will be beneficial to Greek society, the banks themselves, the state and the general atmosphere so that we can escape this atmosphere of gloom," Piraeus Bank CEO Michalis Sallas said.

The euro has rebounded recently after being pounded for months amid worries about the debt crisis, and topped $1.28 on Thursday for the first time in two months. It rose as high as $1.2879 in afternoon European trading — up from $1.2729 in the early morning.

Germany forecast in January that its deficit would swell to 5.5 percent this year in the aftermath of the economic crisis.

The country had reduced its budget deficit to zero in 2008 before the crisis hit, but saw it climb to 3.1 percent last year — narrowly breaching the EU rules.

The Finance Ministry said Thursday that it now expects the deficit to peak at 4.5 percent this year before declining to 4 percent next year, 3 percent in 2012, 2 percent in 2013 and 1.5 percent in 2014.

Germany has settled into modest growth over the past year, helped in particular by its traditional export strength. The government has said the economy may grow by 2 percent in 2010 instead of the officially forecast 1.4 percent.

In Greece, flights were grounded Thursday by a civil servants' protest against austerity measures and an overhaul of the country's pension system.

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

Page 1 of 9

Banner