NIFA-II or Bretton Woods-II: The G-20 (Leaders) summit process on managing global financial markets and the world economy - Quo vadis

12Citations
Citations of this article
32Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Since November 2008, there have been four historic G-20 Leaders meetings (with a fifth scheduled for Korea in November 2010), in lieu of the traditional G-8 Heads of State meeting format, to address the current Global Financial Crisis and other related economic matters of global concern. This new global governance rubric has been denominated by the G-20 Leaders (representing 80 per cent of the world's population and 90 per cent of world GDP) as the premier forum as to future international economic cooperation. This new governance model is rooted in a short and medium-term Action Plan and within a broader and longer-term Global Framework for Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Growth (a new global growth model under the G-20 Leaders direction).This article considers retrospectively the roots of this new economic governance paradigm and prospectively whether and in what ways this framework/process might signal a new international collaborative approach to global economic governance for securing financial stability as a global public good (that is, a new international financial architecture) and otherwise for better rationalizing the policy management of the global economy and the underlying globalization processes. Will this G-20 (Leaders) process prove to be able to function constructively and on a consensus basis as the G-7/8 tried to do previously; and, will it provide the global platform and umbrella framework within which a new Global Deal, and Grand Bargain- a new Bretton Woods II economic, monetary and financial World Order- might evolve so as meaningfully to direct and coordinate global monetary, financial, development, investment, trade and other related global policy considerations (for example, labour, energy, and environmental issues)? Or will this process prove to be merely an ad hoc enhancement of existing global instruments, institutions and arrangements that were put into place in the mid-to-late 1990s by the G-7/8 in addressing the various financial crises of the 1990s- the so-called New International Financial Architecture (NIFA-I)? Also, in this article, the makeup and nature of the range of informal global financial network arrangements, institutions and instruments generated in advance, otherwise related to NIFA-I, or being generated under the new governance framework will be considered, along with the newly envisioned roles of the IMF, Financial Stability Board, World Bank and OECD. Also, a brief discussion will be undertaken as to whether the G-7/8 forum will continue, and if so, in what context and in what relationship to the new G-20 Leaders framework. © 2010 Macmillan Publishers Ltd.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Norton, J. J. (2010). NIFA-II or Bretton Woods-II: The G-20 (Leaders) summit process on managing global financial markets and the world economy - Quo vadis. Journal of Banking Regulation, 11(4), 261–301. https://doi.org/10.1057/jbr.2010.17

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free