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1 of 10. G20 leaders gather for a group photo at the G20 Summit in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, September 25, 2009. Front row, L-R: Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, U.S. President Barack Obama, China's President Hu Jintao, Mexico's President Felipe Calderon. Second row, L-R: Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel, Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Netherlands Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende. Top row, L-R: IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, International Labour Organization (ILO) Director General Juan Somavia, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, World Bank President Robert Zoellick and OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

PITTSBURGH | Fri Sep 25, 2009 7:57pm EDT

PITTSBURGH (Reuters) - The Group of 20 rich and developing nations declared their crisis-fighting efforts a success on Friday and promised to give rising powers such as China more say in rebuilding and guiding the global economy.

Leaders pledged to keep emergency economic supports in place until sustainable recovery is assured, launch a framework for acting together to rebalance economic growth, and implement tougher rules governing banks by 2012 in a statement released at the end of a two-day meeting.

"Here in Pittsburgh, leaders representing two thirds of the planet's population have agreed to a global plan for jobs, growth and a sustained economic recovery," British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said.

U.S. President Barack Obama's first turn hosting a major summit ended on an upbeat note, with leaders claiming victory in stopping the recession from turning into a depression.

"It worked," they said in the final communique. "Our forceful response helped stop the dangerous, sharp decline in global activity and stabilize financial markets."

Obama said, "We cannot tolerate the same old boom-and-bust economy of the past. We can't wait for a crisis to cooperate. That's why our new framework will allow each of us to assess the other's policies, to build consensus on reform, and to ensure that global demand supports growth for all."

The Pittsburgh gathering was the third summit in a year for the G20, which said it would now be the "premier forum" for economic cooperation, supplanting the Western-dominated G7 and G8 that were the primary international forums for decades.

The move was a clear acknowledgment that fast-growing countries such as China and India now play a much more important part in world growth.

"This movement to the G20 and away from the G7 is recognizing economic realities. You can't talk about the global economy without having the major dynamic emerging economies at the table," John Lipsky, the deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund, told Reuters Television.

Disclosure of a second Iranian uranium enrichment plant gave Obama, with the leaders of Britain and France at his side, an opportunity to press for united action against Tehran over its disputed nuclear program.

Obama said Iran was "on notice" that it will have to make a choice when it meets with world powers in Geneva on October 1 whether it would "continue down a path that is going to lead to confrontation".

JOB NOT DONE

Tough economic tasks remained for the group.

The G20 vowed not to return to the "reckless behavior" blamed for triggering the financial crisis, which exploded two years ago when failing U.S. mortgage loans caused catastrophic losses at financial firms around the world.

"A sense of normalcy should not lead to complacency," the G20 leaders said in the communique. "We want growth without cycles of boom and bust and markets that foster responsibility not recklessness."

In addition to the regulatory reforms, which are supposed to be developed by the end of 2010 and put in place two years later, the G20 took aim at lavish pay packages for bankers. The leaders agreed on a provision that would allow firms to claw back or reclaim pay and bonuses previously paid in certain instances. The measure was aimed at making sure bankers don't get huge payouts for making risky bets that later go bad.

The leaders also agreed to shift some voting power at the International Monetary Fund to underrepresented countries such as China from rich ones, another sign that the developed world had accepted the shifting balance of economic power.

In the statement, the G20 endorsed a plan to phase out fossil fuel subsidies as a way to combat global warming, and to step up efforts to complete the Doha round of trade talks.

REBALANCING GROWTH

World leaders also backed a U.S.-led push for reshaping the global economy to smooth out huge surpluses in exporting powerhouses such as China and large deficits in big importing countries such as the United States.

Obama wants the United States to break out of its borrow-and-spend mold and embrace saving and investment, but that means countries such as China that rely on exports for growth must also adjust.

G20 leaders agreed to work together to assess how their domestic policies mesh and to evaluate whether they are "collectively consistent with more sustainable and balanced growth."

Countries with sustained, significant surpluses -- a description that could fit China -- pledged to strengthen domestic sources of growth, according to the communique. By the same token, countries with big deficits -- such as the United States -- pledged to support private savings.

Economists have warned for years that these large imbalances could destabilize the global economy, and previous attempts to correct them have fallen flat.

The United States thinks the effort will succeed this time because China and other big exporters suffered severe slumps when global trade collapsed during the recession, which showed their economies were vulnerable to outside shocks.

CLIMATE CHANGE

Despite the show of solidarity, there were some sources of friction. Many Europeans were frustrated that little was agreed on how to pay for fighting climate change, particularly with a December climate summit in Copenhagen fast approaching.

"I do not hide my concern at the slow rate of progress. Negotiations cannot be an open ended process. It's time to get serious now, not later," European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said in a statement.

Kept at a distance from the G20 convention center, about 10,000 protesters marched against capitalism and the G20's agenda, some of them chanting "You're sexy, you're cute, take off that riot suit" to the police.

There was only one arrest on Friday and the mood was buoyant, in stark contrast to protests on Thursday when there were clashes with police and dozens of arrests.

(Reporting by Reuters G20 team; Additional reporting by Richard Leong in New York; Writing by Emily Kaiser; Editing by Frances Kerry)

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