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BERLIN
(IDN) - The decision of the Group of 20 (G20) leading industrial
and emerging economies to prioritise transparency as a means to
curb systemic risks in the global financial and economic system
and to provide a stimulus that also extends to the developing
world is welcome, says Transparency International (TI).
Agreeing to tackle opacity and to establish a new global
governance body in the form of the Financial Stability Board
announced today, is the kind of decisive action that we expected
from this summit, said TI Chair Huguette Labelle.
In the long term, however, the G20s initial steps towards
transparency must be taken beyond the corridors of power and
properly implemented, with input from civil society, said
Labelle.
As the direction set by the G20 summit is taken forward, it is
essential for the largest macro-economic stimulus in history to
include effective safeguards, with transparency, accountability
and integrity at the forefront, in all aspects, particularly
related to the public management of taxpayers funds, Labelle
said.
The newly announced Financial Stability Board (FSB), tasked by
the G20 to provide an early warning mechanism, should have
accountability, integrity and transparency at its core. civil
society participation on the FSB would be one of many steps
required for its success.
A reform of the shadow banking system, as UK Prime Minister
Brown termed hedge funds along with credit rating agencies,
would require a strong dose of transparency. TI has called for
governance measures in this area to extend whistle-blowing
procedures and protection to anonymous information on excessive
risk-taking, as a key focus.
The nefarious role of tax havens as places where illicit gains
can be stashed, has been rightly addressed by this summit,
Labelle said. TI expects that the G20s bold statement declaring
the end of banking secrecy will go beyond a blacklist to include
international cooperation and the actual recovery of assets
looted from poor countries.
The key priority now is for the G20 to follow up and implement
their commitments. A vital first step is legislation and tax
treaties in line with OECD standards.
Stabilising and reviving the global economy must be the
short-term priority, but the bigger agenda with broader
opportunities requires ensuring that the new regulatory order be
rooted in transparency and accountability. The G20 has taken
initial steps to use that window of opportunity and TI looks
forward to civil society involvement.
Transparency International made specific recommendations to the
G20 to restore public trust in the global economy and give back
hope to the millions of people facing an unstable future.
The recommendations - many of them reflected in the summit
communiqué - covered a range of issues, from the use of public
funds in bail-out programmes to strengthening the role of
development banks and regulatory authorities.
The three aims of this G20 Summit - stabilising financial
markets, strengthening the global and economic systems and
setting a path for sustainable growth - cannot be achieved
without addressing a key root cause of the current meltdown,
namely a severe lack of basic governance measures, transparency
and accountability. (END
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