3 April, Doorstop Interview
April 3, 19989 April, ABC Radio National
April 9, 1998
NO. 034
EMBARGO Immediate Release Visit to Washington D.C., 14 17 April 1998From 14th 17th April I will be visiting Washington to represent Australia at the half-yearly meetings of the Boards of Governors of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank and also to attend a special meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors called in response to financial crises in the Asian region. At the broadest level, these two meetings will consider the outlook for the world economy, the impact of the Asian crisis, and the lessons from that crisis for governments, and for the policies and organisation of the international financial institutions. The US-hosted meeting of the finance ministers/treasurers and central bank governors of 22 major economies will permit more intensive discussion, in a smaller group, of some of the key lessons for preventing or moderating future crises and ensuring the international financial institutions evolve to met the challenges revealed in the recent Asian crises.
International Monetary Fund The meeting of the Interim Committee of the IMF will consider such issues as:
World Bank The meeting of the Development Committee of the World Bank will consider such issues as:
Special Meeting of the G-22 US Treasury Secretary Rubin will be hosting an ad hoc meeting of a so-called G-22 to discuss, in a smaller group of key finance ministers/treasurers and central bank governors, the lessons for the prevention, management and resolution of future crises. The 22 economies are Australia, the G-7 economies, Russia, China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Hong Kong, South Africa, Poland and Singapore. The involvement of the Australian Treasurer in this smaller group will provide an ideal opportunity to explain Australias perspectives both on key issues in the current crisis and the broader issues of how to reduce the probabilities of such crises in future, and the severity of any crises that do still occur.
8 April 1998 |