G-20 pledge devalued
The ink is only now drying on the G-20 finance-ministers’ communique promising to avoid competitive devaluation and to control exchange rate volatility. But this Bloomberg story suggests that the markets have already written off the group’s pledges. Traders are losing confidence in Group of 20 finance officials’ pledge to avoid foreign-exchange manipulation, less than a ...
The ink is only now drying on the G-20 finance-ministers' communique promising to avoid competitive devaluation and to control exchange rate volatility. But this Bloomberg story suggests that the markets have already written off the group's pledges.
The ink is only now drying on the G-20 finance-ministers’ communique promising to avoid competitive devaluation and to control exchange rate volatility. But this Bloomberg story suggests that the markets have already written off the group’s pledges.
Traders are losing confidence in Group of 20 finance officials’ pledge to avoid foreign-exchange manipulation, less than a week after the leaders vowed to stop devaluing currencies to prop up their economies.
Volatility among Group of Seven currencies rose to the highest level in four months since the G-20 meeting ended on Oct. 23, according to the JPMorgan G-7 Volatility Index. Euro- dollar fluctuations jumped 30 percent since Sept. 20, a day before Federal Reserve policy makers said they were prepared to buy bonds and pump more money into the financial system, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist
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