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Brown calls for new Bretton Woods pact as his global reputation soars amid crisis



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Published Date: 14 October 2008
THE world needs a new "Bretton Woods" pact to shore up the global financial order in the 21st century, Gordon Brown has said.
The Prime Minister summoned the memory of the 1944 agreement which created the International Monetary Fund, as he unveiled a £37 billion part-nationalisation of three of Britain's major banks. Mr Brown has been cast as a central figure in tackling th
e global financial crisis, as other world leaders have moved to adopt aspects of the UK's rescue plan.

The Prime Minister told a London audience of financiers and media that he had tried to call for a new pact before, but other "priorities" had crept up for those he had been trying to convince.

"Around us we must build a new Bretton Woods – a new financial architecture for the years ahead," Mr Brown said, referring to the summit attended by Winston Churchill and US president Franklin D Roosevelt six decades ago.

The two great wartime leaders were "taking steps to forge the reconstruction and peace that was to come," Mr Brown said.

"Sometimes it does take a crisis for people to agree that what is obvious and should have been done years ago can no longer be postponed." Mr Brown urged other governments to take similar measures, warning that "we are living in extraordinarily turbulent times".

The Bretton Woods summit in New Hampshire, US, was where the idea of the IMF and General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) first occurred. It was attended by the economist John Maynard Keynes, who advocated state intervention.

Mr Brown said: "With the same courage and foresight of their founders, we must now reform the international financial system around agreed principles of transparency, integrity, responsibility, good housekeeping and co-operation across borders."

Asked whether his premiership was benefiting from his handling of the turmoil in the markets, Mr Brown insisted that he had not wanted to be part of a government that bought shares in ailing banks.

He also predicted that the UK housing slump would be over sooner than the crisis in America.

The latest poll, by YouGov, shows Labour's rating was up three points to 33 per cent, while the Conservatives were down three to 43 per cent. The Liberal Democrats, on 14, were also down two, despite their finance spokesman, Vince Cable, being one of the few to predict the market meltdown.



The full article contains 409 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 13 October 2008 9:34 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Credit Crunch
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 14/10/2008 08:10:01
So now Maggie Broon sees himself as a latter day Winston Churchill. Hang on a minute till I grab the bucket.

The fact remains that Maggie Broon's incompetence and negligence over the past 11 years means that he shares a large part of the blame for the current financial fiasco. The only "bounce" he deserves is to be bounced out of Downing Street.
2

Mr. Lachie Todd,

Edinburgh 14/10/2008 09:19:09
A few short weeks ago Gordon Brown was down, and almost counted out!

Since then battered Brown has risen on the 9th bell, and it is ironic how his stock has soared, and that of the Tory and Lib-Dem leaders has dropped off the radar?

Brown must have had a premonition when he claimed: "This is no time for a novice"! As another famous politician once stated: "Events, dear boy, events!"
3

Doh,

14/10/2008 10:02:12
#2

Brown will go down as soon as people recover from the shock of his incompetence.

We cant send that great Liberal John Maynard Keynes to Bretton Woods 2 but we could send Vince Cable.

Brown wanted a government of all the talents - actually just any talent would be a start.

Its time for someone we can trust with the economy.
Its time for Vince Cable.
4

Allan(handofgod137),

14/10/2008 10:41:35
Brown claims credit for "solving" a crises he caused.
5

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 14/10/2008 12:24:43
Recipe for success a la Broon:-
1) First create the situation by neglect of supervision and a desire to grab taxes for crazy projects.
2) Hit the inevitable brick wall. Banks go under.
3) Step up the conquering hero to "rescue" the situation.

Vomit-inducing hubris and we're not out of the woods yet - it's only the first week of nationalising banks!
6

david hill,

bern, swiss 14/10/2008 17:21:23
Bretton Woods apart, bankers and politicians are ‘directly’ responsible for the unfolding economic recession and the dire state that we are in, and no others

For we live in a make-believe world where ‘debt’ is the driving force of economies. This philosophies of borrow now and pay later is the systemic problem that is now starting to bring the world’s economies to their knees. It should be earn, save and purchase, but where the financial institutions have spawned a self-styled system of ‘never never land’ that simply does not exist. With political support for years this terrible system of debt-ridden economies, that supports nothing else but the capitalist system, has made many of the world’s bankers rich beyond their wildest dreams. But common sense dictates that they must have known that in the end there would inevitably be a day of reckoning; for they were the ones who produced these so-called ‘innovative financials’ that are now destroying the people and their future lives. But again, it must have been not their reckoning but the peoples’ reckoning, as they knew all along that they would be immune to the eventual downfall of their ‘deceitful’ activities and where their millions and billions would be secure even at the end of all this deception. Governments and bankers are therefore duplicitous in this respect and they should both hold their heads in shame. But will they? I very much doubt it as they are hand-in-glove and learn very little from one generation to another. Indeed, many senior figures within banking dynasties are intertwined with high political office. But more serious is that ‘Time’ is now physically running out on the world’s people but they do not see it. Indeed, with vastly dwindling natural resources to sustain human life itself and 80 millions more mouths to feed every year, the present incumbents (bankers and politicians) are driving humanity to its very extinction. Therefore the sooner we see the present system for what it really is, the
7

david hill,

14/10/2008 17:22:42
continued

Therefore the sooner we see the present system for what it really is, the sooner we may have a chance of saving the human experience for our very young that live in hope today for a peaceful and meaningful future life. For it is they now who will inherit the consequences of years of our innovative neglect by both politicians and bankers alike and where their only driving force was sheer greed on a monumental scale. Things I believe have not changed one bit and where people like Brown and his kind are now being seen as our saviour, but where in reality, they were the very ones who caused the terrible state of affairs to happen in the first place. I just wish that people would use reason and fully comprehend the real cause of why we are where we are today (and for that matter tomorrow). For this definitely lies at the feet of our present politicians and bankers, no others.

Dr David Hill
World Innovation Foundation Charity (WIFC)
Bern, Switzerland
14 October 2008
UK Postal Address: PO Box A60, Huddersfield, HD1 1XJ
UK Contact No: 044 (0) 1484 537181

 

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