- The G20 was created in 1999 by the G7 countries in response to financial crises to help stabilize global markets and the international monetary system.
- It has taken on a larger role since the 2008 crisis and expanded its membership to include both creditor and emerging economies.
- However, the G20 and other global institutions have struggled to anticipate and resolve major issues like inequality, unemployment, climate change, and have focused more on short-term banking rescues in developed countries. Significant obstacles remain to establishing a new economic governance with more justice for developing countries.
1. G20 and Global Governance
Nicolas Foucras PhD
University TEC de Monterrey
nicolas.foucras@itesm.mx
2. • Created in 1999 by G7
• Goal at the beginning: To give an appropriate response to
Financial Crisis in DCs that could affect the global stability
(Mexico 95; Asia 97; Russia 98; Brazil 99; Argentina 2001)
To face instability of the International Monetary System (IMS)
i.e. To help IMF to stabilize global financial market
• This role has grown after the 2008 crisis (which is a crisis
originated in the ICs) as well as the number of countries:
– Creditors were invited (BRICS)
– MINT countries (except Nigeria): because they are key
countries for international economy due to their important
role in the global value chains (they received important FDI
from ICs during past 2 decades)
• The way to operate: promoting discussion (it does not create a
hard law) + formulate proposals and coordinated actions
3. Structure
• 20 members (EU appears as a full member)
• Rotary Presidency (1 year) (2012: Mexico; 2013:
Russia; 2014: Australia; 2015: Turkey; 2016:
China)
• Composition
– Director of the IMF
– President of the WB
– Ministers of Finance
– Presidents of Central Banks
– Delegates of each Government
– After 2008: Head of States and Head of Governments
Population:
4. Special invitations
• Traditionally other actors are participating in pre-
summit meetings :
– Chair of the ASEAN
– Chair of the African Union (AU)
– A representative of the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD):
• Economic development program of the AU
• Economic co-operation and integration among African countries
– Director of the International Labor Organization (ILO)
– Director of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OCDE)
– Representatives of the UN
– Representatives of the WTO
– Spain is a permanent non-member
5.
6. Characteristics of the MINT Vs BRICS
Rapid growth
Accelerated integration into
the international economy
MINT
BRICS
Much more pragmatic with
regard to their integration
into the globalization
7. During the last decades the international panorama has
changed: now BRICS appear to be among the first economies
=> justifies their membership into the G20
8. MINT economies will appear among the
most important in the next future
according to WB and Goldman Sachs
9. 2 perspectives to explain G20:
• Hegemonic: ICs gather with other countries to legitimize their
decisions and their model of international economy
=> Goal = to save the hegemonic model established in 1944
and to preserve the current order
• Cooperative:
– It reflects a change in the hegemonic global governance
implemented by ICs in 1944
– It reflects the mutual influence/interdependence and ICs
accept this new situation
– It reflects a better equilibrium in the decision-making
process
– Goal: To organize the redistribution of powers between ICs
and DCs
10. Towards a Polycentric pattern that will
balance/threat the US hegemony?
• Zakari: consolidation of the BRICS reflects a process of
redistribution of power that is inevitable
• However it is difficult to talk about a “counter-power”
because there is not any real unified front representing
the “South” and able to counterbalance effectively the
hard core (Foucras)
• However on a long-term vision many agree that China
could threat the US hegemony if there is no change in the
current trend
11. Global issues negotiated and objectives (priority is
different depending on the country):
• The debt crisis and lack of liquidity for productive sectors and Gvts
• The financial regulation and transparency (fight against Tax havens,
tax evasion and corruption)
• Macro-policy cooperation (Goal: to coordinate public decisions to
foster international stability)
• The promotion of multilateral trade (to face the current difficulties in
the WTO)
• To develop energy sustainability and to consider what many call the
Green growth (to fight global warming)
• To coordinate policies and strategies to face unemployment in ICs
• To reduce Food insecurity in DCs and LDCs (to stabilize the situation
and to control migration)
• To reform the International Financial Architecture (IMF quotas)
12. There are parallel summits
• B20: “20 Business” represents business community
• L20: “Labor 20” represents Labor Unions
• T20 “Think 20” “the world’s leading think tank’s
representatives”
• C20 represents Civil society
• Y20 represents youth
15. • G20 and other global initiatives (and all the international
architecture) have not been able to anticipate and to resolve
the different crisis and externalities:
– Poverty, Exclusion and Migration
– Concentration of the wealth among few people => growing
inequality (i.e. problem of global wealth distribution)
– Unemployment and Informal economy
– Pollution and global warming
– Deterioration of the access to food and water
– The lost of sovereignty/democracy (power transference from
societies to global actors)
– Violence and transnational crime…
Welfare deterioration (individual is a means and not the final
purpose)
Human survival is at risk (Tiberghien)
• It has focused above all on rescue programs to save the
global banking failures (short term vision)
16. Wealth Distribution among countries
• 200 years ago, ICs were only 3 times richer than
poor countries
• By the 1960s, they were 35 times richer
• Today, the multiplier is 80
17. “The richest 300 people have more money than the poorest 3
billion people combined” (UNICEF)
18. The current situation of the global order;
or global equilibrium depends on:
• Few that are consuming in access (USA and part of Europe) =>
it means high debt (government, household and firms)
• Many societies are transferring their gains to ICs
DCs depend on the level of consumption in ICs (their
production/export level) => they are willing to transfer and to
rescue these economies
Transfer of the wealth from DCs to ICs
Affects the potential growth and social development of DCs
• However the situation is changing progressively: new social
class in DCs wants to consume and governments are more and
more worried about domestic consolidation first=> there is a
growing retention
19. Debt is very concentrated in ICs => flow of
money is from south to north
22. What are the obstacles for the construction of a new
economic governance with more justice for DCs?
• Distributional dilemma: to change the order means a
redistribution of powers: it will lead to a new
political/military equilibrium in favor of China and others
opposition from the main powers and risk of conflicts
• Strong opposition from actors gaining more from the lack
of governance (ICs, financial market, Banks and MNF)
• Multipolarity: many actors and interests (State and Non-
State actors) it is difficult to reach consensus and to take
decisions
23. • New potential hegemon (China) reluctant to take
responsibilities (there is an important cost to manage
global/common goods: peace and trade); very slow to
assume its role as were USA at the beginning of the last
century
• USA’s domestic politics: efforts to slow the post-
hegemonic transition (political cost)
• China, USA; EU… depend on the stability of the actual
order as their destiny is linked to the US economy and
the USD (straightjacket) . Ex: China is depending on its
exports to USA and EU => it agrees to support the
current order
• Financial markets fear any reform or change in the
global order (uncertainty)
24. • ICs do their best to slow the consolidation of the
global governance (i.e USA does not want to
institutionalize G20 or to reform the IMF)
=> Difficult to consolidate global governance that would allow:
– Better protection of everyone's interest
– Better transparency
– Better fair trade
– Reduced uncertainty
– Redistribution of power according to the new outlook
25. Activity:
• Form groups of 3
• Answer the questions (15 minutes):
– What is the strength of the BRICS?
– What is the weakness of the BRICS?
– Do you think they are able to change the current order?
Why?
• Make your presentation