Geithner: G20 to focus on growth, confidence

WASHINGTON | Thu Jun 24, 2010 6:46pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Thursday that the Group of 20 leaders' summit should focus on both growth and fiscal responsibility to lay a foundation for stronger economic growth in the future.

In excerpts from an interview with BBC World News America, Geithner said that belt-tightening European countries needed to decide their own mix of policies, but were focused on the need for stronger growth.

"They (Europe) need to make the choice of what makes the best choice for their country -- it's going to differ across countries," Geithner said. "We're not in a position to figure out what the best mix of policies are, given what their politics are, that's the choice they have to make. But our job is to make sure we're all sitting there together, focused on this challenge of growth and confidence because growth and confidence are paramount."

Geithner, who will participate in the G20 summit this weekend in Toronto, said member countries all agree on the need to restore fiscal responsibility and bring down deficits to sustainable levels, but said the bulk of that should come after growth resumes.

"We've laid out very ambitious plans for doing that as well, and those will start to take effect as they are everywhere as the economy recovers and growth (is) restored," he said. "We're in a very good position now of being able to deliver relatively strong growth rates to what we're seeing in the other major economies, but I think the world understands now that the world, growth in the future around the world, can't depend on the United States as much as it did in the past."

Although Geithner has pressed the need for countries with fiscal capacity to keep spending to cement recovery, he said U.S. deficits were on track to decline "on a pace very rapid, very extreme relative to almost any other country around the world."

He said low U.S. interest rates and the relative strength of the dollar were a sign of investor confidence in America's ability to deliver a more sustainable fiscal position.

"Our deficit will fall dramatically as the economy recovers and as the emergency stimulus actions we put in place in crisis expire as they will," Geithner said. "So I think we have a very strong commitment to a responsible fiscal path for the future and you see that confidence in how investors, American and global investors, are behaving every day."

(Reporting by David Lawder. Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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Comments (2)
MDan wrote:
Countries should focus on their own yard and stop peeking over the neighbour’s fence.
EU is well ahead of any country in this world, socially, economically and culturally. At most they need to work to prevent economical and political abuses and environmental and public health disasters that happen elsewhere.

Jun 25, 2010 7:52am EDT  --  Report as abuse
mckibbinusa wrote:
The banksters in the Fed care about growth, inflation, and unemployment in that order — so clearly, adding jobs is no longer on the radar according to our Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner himself — the job losses in America are permanent — as far as Geithner is concerned, the unemployed in America are simply “unlucky” and should probably immigrate to other third-world counties to find jobs and raise their families — the good news is that Africa is looking for mining workers — oh, and I read somewhere that it is now fashionable to hire “Americans” as domestic workers in China — I am so proud of the Fed and the banksters who run our country…

Jun 25, 2010 8:08am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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