Skip navigation
Geithner Video Gallery
Exploring the outlook for M&A activity in the Australian market, with Roger Montgomery, MD of Clime Asset Management and...
The appointment of Jon Huntsman as U.S.' ambassador to China is an excellent move as he will bring a bipartisan approach...
You say the name of a stock, and Mad Money's Jim Cramer tells you whether to buy or sell.
The CNBC news team looks at a secret gathering of super moguls that occurred earlier this month.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner testifies before a House panel.

Current DateTime: 04:27:00 22 May 2009
LinksList Documentid: 24355697
US Treasury's Geithner Says Downturn May Be Easing
By: Reuters | 24 Apr 2009 | 01:07 AM ET
Text Size

The global economic downturn has shown signs of easing in recent weeks, although significant risks remain, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said before a meeting of G20 officials in Washington on Friday.

Writing in the Financial Times newspaper, Geithner said the decline in world trade may be abating and conditions in some financial markets have improved.

However, he warned that the 2009 outlook was challenging, with the global economy expected to shrink for the first time in six decades and world trade forecast to suffer the worst collapse since World War Two.

"In recent weeks, there have been some encouraging signs that the global economic downturn may be slackening," he wrote. "Conditions in some financial markets have improved and the decline in world trade may be abating."

He urged leaders of the G20 group of rich and developing nations to "keep at this process of repair and reform" to help the recovery.

Finance ministers and central bankers from the G7, which groups the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan, meet on Friday afternoon before an evening gathering of the larger Group of 20 that includes key emerging market countries like China, India, Brazil and South Korea.

"The G20 nations must follow through on their commitment to deliver the fiscal, monetary and financial policies necessary to restore growth," Geithner wrote.

The United States has moved aggressively to stabilise and fix its financial system and restore credit flows, he added.

Most other countries will follow suit in a collective fiscal response by the G20 for 2008-10 estimated by the international Monetary Fund (IMF) to be worth $5,000 billion, he said.

"Our task now is to ensure the effective implementation of these programmes and to narrow the growth shortfall," Geithner wrote. "The IMF must be proactive in holding our feet to the fire of our good intentions."

Plans to put in place $250 billion to support the IMF are substantially completed and the IMF has taken the first steps toward allocating $250 billion of Special Drawing Rights.

"Real progress requires time, and significant risks and challenges remain," Geithner added. "Thus, it is critical that we continue to act together to strengthen the basis for global recovery."

Copyright 2009 Reuters. Click for restrictions.
Tools:
Print EmailAdd This share icon


Current DateTime: 01:46:50 22 May 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29778428

Current DateTime: 01:04:01 22 May 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29779196

Current DateTime: 12:50:30 22 May 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29779199

Current DateTime: 12:53:22 22 May 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29779198
  Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes
Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis

© 2009 CNBC, Inc.  All Rights Reserved.
Thomson ReutersThomson Reuters