IMF warns of meltdown; France says Europe to act
WASHINGTON: The IMF warned on Saturday the world’s financial system
was near meltdown and France promised that a meeting of European leaders
in Paris will detail measures to keep a market panic from triggering the
most severe global downturn in decades.
The International Monetary Fund said it backed a Group of Seven plan
to try to stabilize markets and urged “exceptional vigilance,
coordination and readiness to take bold action” to contain a firestorm
that pushed global stocks to five-year lows on Friday.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
meeting in France, said they had “prepared a certain number of
decisions” to present at a European summit on Sunday to try to restore
normal flows in blocked credit markets. France’s Economy Minister,
Christine Lagarde, said just before leaving Washington the Sunday
gathering would go beyond talking about remedies to “put meat, muscles
on the bones of that skeleton and to develop, follow up and execute upon
it.”
The United States appealed for patience but the IMF said time was
short after the Group of Seven industrialized nations failed to agree on
concrete measures to end the crisis at a meeting on Friday.
“Intensifying solvency concerns about a number of the largest
U.S.-based and European financial institutions have pushed the global
financial system to the brink of systemic meltdown,” IMF chief Dominique
Strauss-Kahn said.
Strauss-Kahn later expressed hope that government actions will prove
powerful enough to persuade banks to resume lending and bring an end to
a spreading credit crunch.
“In the coming days ... what I expect is that the reaction by the
different institutions will be positive enough to unfreeze the different
markets and to restore the necessary funding,” he said at a news
conference. Reuters
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