Aditya Sinha: UK not OK, but go easy on the Schadenfreude

Watching the British street fill with rioters and looters may have filled some Indians with Schadenfreude (pleasure at another’s misfortunes). For, they ask, isn’t this the country that ruled us till 64 years ago? It’s as if the tables are being flipped over. You can almost see the trajectories of two nations: one once the ruler, now a part of the declining West; the other a former sufferer of a millennium of invasions, now part of a rising Asia.

Let’s not get too gleeful: firstly, we’re not yet a superpower, and England remains a dream for many Indians. Secondly, it isn’t as if riots are alien to India; most of us know that it wouldn’t take much to spark one. (Perhaps every society has chaos lurking just beneath its surface, and civility has a tenuous hold.) Thirdly, England have comprehensively slaughtered us in the current Test series, so any Schadenfreude sounds suspiciously like sour grapes. And fourthly, let’s not forget how dysfunctional our own politics is at the moment.

The UPA-2 government is paralysed; various scams have caused such a loss of credibility that even when an experienced and wise voice like finance minister Pranab Mukherjee’s said India was unlikely to be scathed by the turmoil in the global financial markets, many did not pay him much attention. Of course he’s right. But who believes the government right now?

So let’s not get carried away smirking at the Brits.

You could argue that India’s problems are a passing phase and that our politics are a self-regulating ecosystem; it’s precisely when things look most chaotic and confusing that a fresh solution emerges. What is undeniable, though, is the eclipse of the West.

Sure, the US will remain at the top for decades to come, but what about the Europeans? The double-dip recession, of which signs are loud and clear, will possibly and irretrievably ruin Europe.

The US may lose a generation, and though its decline has begun no one expects it to become a basket-case soon because one, it is still the world’s economic, political and military superpower; two, at US $14 trillion its economy simply dwarfs those next in line; three, it remains the technological and scientific innovator for the world; four, it is demographically in far better shape than Europe; and five, its world-view is optimistic, unlike that of the cranky Europeans.

England’s riots showed how deep the malaise is in Europe. It is difficult to argue with British Prime Minister David Cameron’s assertion that the rioting was the handiwork of criminals. But he (and

the rest of his political class) tried to pre-empt any talk of deeper causes. In which case, Cameron and the other European leaders had better brace themselves for more riots in the years to come. Their countries have no money and they have no jobs. They have no society and they are squeezing out the middle class.

The West began unthreading its social fabric long ago by corporatising the basic social unit, the family. At a panel discussion in Mumbai this week, British writer Patrick French suggested that while in India, your family would tell you to not go out and riot or loot (and you would heed them), in England that very social pressure no longer existed.

Perhaps the conservatives are correct in saying that their society’s welfare systems have spoilt them; perhaps the Left is correct in saying that slashing social spending is tearing up families and breeding violence.

Whatever the truth may be (and it’s probably a bit of both) the fact is, there are only so many CCTVs you can put up in your cities, or only so many jails you can build. And for either of these things, you need money; which the Europeans have run out of.

Perhaps the real measure of who’s headed where is the middle class. Even in America, the worry is about the middle class getting squeezed out, and this will be in evidence during their next presidential elections, when Barack Obama will portray the Republicans as pro-rich and they will portray him as pro-poor.

The middle class, which by most economic measures has been shrinking (in their share of the national wealth, in the types of jobs that have been lost, etc), will get left out of the debate. At least, however, it is not as bad as it is in England, which is going from being a nation of shop-keepers to a nation of shop-sweepers.

In India the opposite holds true. At the Patrick French panel discussion, participants moaned on about how India’s middle class has grown, how it dominates the politics, the industry, the bureaucracy, and the media, etc. Even those Indians who fear the middle class admit that it is growing. That it is a good thing can be gauged by the fact that the other major middle class that is growing is China’s.

There’s your barometer. Keep this in mind when you watch a very middle-class ritual on TV tomorrow, the Independence Day function, or a very middle-class hero named Anna Hazare the day after, as he begins his hunger fast. And contrast all this with the violence you saw in Britain. But go easy on the Schadenfreude.

The writer is the Editor-in-Chief, DNA, based in Mumbai

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RPT-UPDATE 2-Russia to sell $29 bln state assets on market

MOSCOW, July 27 (Reuters) – Russia plans to sell $29 billion worth of assets on the open market, a senior government official said on Wednesday, allaying investors fears about the transparency of the biggest privatisation since the 1990s.

The planned asset sale is designed to fill budget holes that Russia is to battle for the next few years.

“We will sell significant stakes in state companies on the market. We plan to keep controlling stakes,” Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin told a press briefing ahead of a government meeting on Thursday, which will debate key budget parameters and privatisation plans.

“(Assets) will be valued publicly, in line with market prices and tenders will be open,” he said. “We are fully ruling out a situation when somebody sells something to someone at an artificially low price.”

He said the government wanted to earn around $10 billion next year from asset sales but did not name the companies that would be auctioned off. The government will meet on Thursday to approve draft budgets for 2011-2013 and asset sales.

If approved, the sale would become Russia’s most ambitious since President Boris Yeltsin’s era, when well-connected tycoons snapped up some of the biggest oil and metals firms at low prices.

Investors have applauded the plan to sell minority stakes in major state firms in the next three years but have said they are keen to see how transparent the process will be and whether foreigners will be allowed to bid.

The plan could help the Kremlin plug budget holes ahead of the 2012 presidential election, which will require the authorities to maintain high social spending to guarantee good approval ratings.

Sources told Reuters over the weekend the government wants to sell minority stakes in firms such as Russia’s biggest oil producer Rosneft (ROSN.MM), lender VTB (VTBR.MM) and oil pipeline monopoly Transneft (TRNF_p.MM). [ID:nLDE66P0S0]

The plan could offer the government an alternative to higher taxation in its battle to reduce budget deficits.

On Tuesday, Kudrin said Russia was unlikely to balance its budget deficit until 2015 and on Wednesday Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Russia may not be able to reduce the deficit below 5 percent — or $80 billion — this year. [ID:nLDE66R1YA]

The plan ensures Russia will keep control of the firms in a clear signal the Kremlin is not moving away from the resource nationalism it has developed over the past decade of high commodity prices.

The sales plan would undergo a final review as part of budget debates on Sept 7, and then filed to parliament.

Speaking of taxes Kudrin said the government had approved a decision to increase mineral extraction taxes on gas producers by 61 percent from next year.

For a factbox on the proposed asset sales, please click on [ID:nLDE66P1DU]

(Reporting by Gleb Bryanski, writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov, Editing by Lidia Kelly, Ron Askew)

UK’s Osborne says no deal with BOE’s King on low rates

uly 29 (Reuters) – British finance minister George Osborne on Thursday said there was no tacit agreement with the Bank of England’s governor Mervyn King on keeping interest rates low. (Reporting by Sumeet Desai)

Analysis: Emerging market capital curbs may be just the ticket

(Reuters) – Investors are buying more long-dated bonds and overseas-listed shares in key emerging markets, suggesting capital controls set up in these countries may be helping curb volatile portfolio flows and currency swings.

While it is hard to gauge the net impact of controls set up in some developing countries, the experience of Brazil and Indonesia suggests it is possible to deter big speculative flows or redirect portfolio cash to less volatile assets without necessarily scaring investors off.

Last October, frustrated by a 30 percent surge in the real, Brazil slapped a 2 percent tax on foreign flows into its stocks and bonds. It was followed by Taiwan, Indonesia and South Korea, which have imposed a variety of milder curbs on capital.

Nine months on, investors say they are still putting cash in Brazil while Finance Minister Guido Mantega has been quoted as saying that the levy has changed the “irrational course” of the markets and that the real currency is now less volatile.

Fund managers say the tax has also raised millions of dollars in government revenue.

“Has this tax made my life tougher? Definitely yes. Has it put me off investing in Brazil? Definitely not,” said Jose Cuervo, who looks after $6 billion in Brazilian stocks at HSBC.

Cuervo says the 2 percent levy has to be seen against the backdrop of 20 percent-plus corporate earnings growth.

To avoid the tax but still invest in Brazil, he buys American Depositary Receipts in Brazilian firms instead of the underlying Sao Paulo-listed stocks where possible. ADRs are priced in dollars and enable investors to sidestep cross-border and cross-currency transactions.

The tax has also slowed some cash outflows.

“In the past when we sold positions in local bonds we would move returns back offshore into dollars. But now we look to keep the money onshore in Brazil,” says Brett Diment, who oversees $5 billion in emerging debt at Aberdeen Asset Management.

Data from Indonesia, another popular emerging market, suggests steps enacted there in June may have helped push out some foreign accounts from short-dated debt.

Jakarta now requires buyers of one-month central bank bonds to hold them for at least 28 days, making the short-term debt less attractive to cut-and-run speculators.

Foreign holdings of six-month Indonesia bills surged 37 percent in July, data shows. As foreigners raised duration, one-month yields rose while six-month and one-year yields fell 25-30 bps.

“The results are in line with what the government wanted: more investors in longer-dated bonds, but at the same time foreign ownership of Indonesian bonds is at a record high,” said Standard Chartered currency strategist Thomas Harr.

TOO SUCCESSFUL?

Ironically, investors fear the relative success of Brazil’s levy may tempt the government to raise it further.

“Brazil’s local bonds are among the most attractive assets in EM, but if the real breaks much higher the market will be concerned about further measures,” Diment said.

“So from that point of view (the tax) has been a successful measure in that it is limiting currency appreciation.”

Some also worry that countries such as Colombia or Peru could follow Brazil’s example.

The Institute for International Finance has cut its 2010 forecasts for emerging market capital flows, citing fear of more controls.

Across emerging markets, flows into equities have dipped from last year’s highs and currencies have weakened, while bond flows are at record highs. This is significant as equities are widely seen as a key destination for speculative cash.

Central bank reserve growth, often used for calculating the ebb and flow of hot money, has also slowed. Developing countries’ reserves grew $80 billion in the first three months of 2010, IMF data shows, versus a $200 billion jump the previous quarter.

Still, analysts are reluctant to pin these developments entirely on capital controls, noting that the industrialized world’s poor growth outlook is weighing on emerging markets and creating a friendlier environment for bonds than stocks.

“In the past whenever G3 growth collapsed, flows to EM have slowed,” says Claire Dissaux, strategist at Millennium Global citing 1998 and 2002. “You would have to believe in true decoupling to expect flows to continue at the same level.”

Emerging central banks say it is not currencies or portfolio flows that they aim to curb, though, but hot money flitting from market to market in search of yield — the type of cash that is widely blamed for past emerging market crises.

They may be fighting an uphill battle as emerging interest rates are rising, creating a powerful driver for speculative capital seeking returns in short-term deposits.

But multilateral lenders’ surprising endorsement of calibrated controls may be tacit acknowledgement that the curbs do indeed discourage hot money.

A February paper by IMF economists noted “an effect on the composition of inflows rather than the aggregate volume” resulting from such curbs — just the result the emerging economies are looking for.

(Editing by Hugh Lawson)

Irish may halt budget reform early–govt party

July 18 (Reuters) – Ireland may not have the political will to bring its budget deficit in line with EU rules as planned by 2014, the chairman of the smaller governing coalition member Green Party was quoted as saying on Sunday.

Investors and European leaders have praised Ireland for austerity measures culminating in 4 billion euros ($5.2 billion) of spending cuts imposed in last December’s budget for 2010.

Green Party Chairman Dan Boyle told the Sunday Tribune it was “probably a heresy” for a government party to question whether the deficit could be cut to 3 percent of gross domestic product by 2014 from more than 14 percent in 2009.

“It is certainly doable if you want to be draconian every year,” Boyle was quoted by the newspaper as saying. “But is it politically feasible and is it socially possible?”

Boyle said he still expected the cabinet to deliver the 3 billion euros of savings planned for the 2011 budget in December and then the government could “take stock”.

“I do not see the public appetite continuing,” Boyle said. “It could be that we have neutral budgets for a period.”

The Green Party last year debated quitting the alliance with Prime Minister Brian Cowen’s Fianna Fail party due to the strains of the fiscal tightening and bank rescue programme, but its members ultimately decided to stay on board.

Cowen and Finance Minister Brian Lenihan, the main architect of the reforms and also from Fianna Fail, are adamant Dublin must stick to austerity measures for the next four years.

If Ireland loosened its budget discipline, it could cause a flight of investors who already demand a hefty premium for holding Irish sovereign bonds.

So far Green ministers have supported the reforms. Boyle is chairman of the party and a member of the upper house of parliament, but not a member of the cabinet.

The budget deficit has risen partly due to the cost of rescuing banks, with much of it spent on nationalised Anglo Irish Bank [ANGIB.UL].

Boyle said he also expected the state to raise its minority holding in another lender, Allied Irish Banks (ALBK.I) to a majority of up to 70 percent.

(Reporting by Andras Gergely; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Japan Noda: need to carefully prepare next FY budget

July 12 (Reuters) – Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said on Monday the government would have to carefully prepare the budget for next fiscal year, after the ruling Democratic Party and its coalition partner were denied a majority in an upper house election the previous day.

Noda, speaking to reporters, also said the election would lead to the beginning of multiparty debate on reforming the tax code, including the sales tax.

Voters dealt the Democrats a stinging rebuke in the upper house election on Sunday, depriving it and its tiny ally of a majority less than a year after the Democrats swept to power with promises of change. (Reporting by Stanley White)

UPDATE 1-IMF chief sees risks from surge in capital flows

DAEJEON, South Korea, July 12 (Reuters) – Asia has emerged as a global economic powerhouse but is faced with policy challenges from rising capital inflows and needs to watch out for possible shocks from Europe, the IMF’s chief said on Monday.

Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn admitted to mistakes the International Monetary Fund made in helping several Asian countries overcome the 1997-1998 financial crisis but said its efforts eventually paid off by making the region more sound.

Strauss-Kahn also said during a conference, co-hosted by the IMF and the South Korean government, that it was working on ways to enhance or redesign its existing lending facilities and that details would be available by November.

“We may have made mistakes. Who doesn’t?,” he said during the conference in the central South Korean city of Daejeon. “We have learned how big the danger of volatile capital flows is and how big those capital flows may be.”

At the same conference, South Korean Finance Minister Yoon Jeung-hyun urged the IMF to take steps to help prevent another financial crisis, repeating the country’s call for a strengthened network of financial safety nets.

“I belive the IMF has an important contribution to make, by proposing and enacting concrete and realistic measures to strengthen financial safety nets around the globe,” Yoon said.

Yoon said efforts from developing countries were not sufficient to withstand external shocks on increases in volume and high volatility of capital flows.

Strauss-Kahn also acknowledged the argument that the IMF’s prescriptions offered in return for rescuing Asia’s emerging economies of South Korea, Thailand and Indonesia during the 1990s crisis could have been better structured.

“We have learned also that we need to focus conditionality on the real problems, not having a long list of conditions that may have little to do with the problems at stake,” he said at the conference on Asia’s growing role in the global economy.

He warned of remaining downward risks mainly involving the fiscal crisis in Europe.

“Obviously Europe is today with low growth and some risks of crisis on the fiscal side, which means that policymakers need to remain attuned to negative shocks including capital inflows,” he said.

He repeated his previous view that the U.S. dollar will remain the world’s major reserve currency for a long time, saying it will take a long time before alternatives such as the IMF’s special drawing rights (SDRs) emerge as a reserve money. (Additional reporting by Cheon Jong-woo; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

GREECE – Factors to Watch on July 6

July 6 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events which may affect Greek financial markets on Tuesday:

GREEK FINMIN CONFIDENT ON DEFICIT TARGETS, RISKS REMAIN

Greece is confident it will meet its target to cut the budget deficit by 40 percent to 8.1 percent of economic output this year but risks remain on revenue growth targets, its Finance Minister said on Monday. [ID:nLDE6640W0]

GREECE’S CASH DEFICIT DOWN 41.8 PCT Y/Y IN H1-CENBANK

Greece’s cash deficit shrank 41.8 percent year-on-year in the first half of 2010, meaning a lower net borrowing need, the country’s central bank said on Monday. [ID:nATH005560]

GREECE NOW SECOND-RISKIEST WORLD SOVEREIGN-CMA

A deterioration of Greece’s debt in the second quarter of this year helped it become the world’s second-riskiest sovereign in a survey by credit default monitor CMA DataVision published on Monday. [ID:nLDE6611R7]

TERNA ENERGY APPLIES FOR FIVE PROJECT LICENCES

Terna Energy (TENr.AT) applied to energy regulator RAE for licences to costruct five hydroelectric projects with a total capacity of 637 MW, financial daily To Vima reported, citing company officials.

www.tovima.gr

FRENCH RETAILER FNAC TO EXIT GREECE, SELL TWO UNITS TO RIVAL

French electronics and books retailer Fnac (PRTP.PA) is leaving the Greek market as a result of rising losses, financial daily Imerisia reported. Domestic rival Public will buy out two of the three Fnac shops in Athens, the paper added citing unnamed sources.

www.imerisia.gr

EUROPE FACTORS-SHARES SET TO INCH HIGHER; LACK U.S. LEAD

European shares are expected to open slightly higher on Tuesday, bouncing back from a six-week closing low and mirroring gains in Asia, with the lack of a lead from Wall Street, closed on Monday for the Independence Day holiday, keeping investors sidelined. [ID:nLDE66002O]

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For other related news, double click on: ———————————————————- EUR Money Guide Greek Debt News [DBT-GR] Greek Equities Guide Greece’s Debt Greek Economic Indicators [ECI-GR] Government Debt Greek Stock News [STX-GR] Greek Money News [M-GR] Greek Exchange Info ———————————————————

Romania – Factors to Watch on June 29

June 29 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Tuesday.

FINMIN

Finance Minister Sebastian Vladescu and Interior Minister Vasile Blaga hold news conference on fighting tax evasion at 0900 GMT.

ECONMIN

Economy Minister Adriean Videanu is expected to attend a seminar of bourse listing of shares owned by the state starting at 0600 GMT.

ROMANIA LEU DEEPENS LOSSES AFTER TAX HIKE

Romania’s leu currency hit an all-time low against the euro on Monday EURRON=, as the government struggled to quell concerns over public finances following a court ruling that could undermine its deal with the IMF. It continued to slide in early trade on Tuesday.

[ID:nLDE65R0EM]

LEU

The recent leu losses do not show a tendency for destabilisation of the currency market, central bank adviser Adrian Vasilescu said.

He also said now there is a big question mark that will receive an answer on Wednesday, when the IMF board meets.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 1,3

Leu depreciation on Monday had a very important psychological component and for sure is reversible as the Romanian economy has not changed that strongly from one day to the other, Romania’s representative to the IMF Mihai Tanasescu said.

He also said that according to IMF calculations the balance exchange rate for the leu is 4.1 – 4.2 per euro.

Gandul, Page 2

ROMANIA SEEN HOLDING RATES AFTER VAT HIKE

Romania’s central bank is seen ending its rate easing cycle on Wednesday, holding rates at 6.25 percent, after a government plan to hike value added tax increased uncertainty about the economy and IMF loans.

[ID:nLDE65R16O]

WAGE CUTS

Parliament meets to rework an austerity package that the Constitutional Court overturned on Friday when it ruled planned pension cuts were illegal. Cuts in state wages, which the court did not object to but were included in the package, must now be re-discussed.

VAT HIKE

The government decision to hike the value added tax by 5 percentage points was published in Romania’s official monitor on Monday.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 3

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

click [RO/DIARY], and a calendar of east European economic indicators, see [CONV/DIARY].

For other related news, double click on: ————————————————————— Romania Market Debt [RO-DBT] Romanian forex [RO-FRX] Romania Market Report [ROL/] Romanian money [RO-M] Emerging Market Debt [EMRG/DBT] Emerging forex [EMRG/FRX] All Emerging Markets news [EMRG] CEE indicators [CONV/DIARY] All East Europe News [EEU] E.Europe equities [.CEE] TOP NEWS — Emerging markets [TOP/EMRG] TOP NEWS — Convergence watch [TOP/EAST] Romanian indicators [RO/ECI] Main page of Reuters poll —————————————————————

German FinMin confident of EU short-sale ban -paper

June 25 (Reuters) – European countries are moving towards a joint ban of naked short-selling, Germany’s Finance Minister was quoted on Friday as saying.

Germany surprised its European Union partners last month by announcing a unilateral ban on the speculative trades in top financial stocks, euro zone government bonds and related credit default swaps (CDS).

“I am confident of a ban on naked short-selling (on the EU level),” Wolfgang Schaeuble told German daily Boersen-Zeitung.

“And in financial sector taxation, we are also making progress.” (Reporting by Sakari Suoninen and Jonathan Gould; editing by Patrick Graham)
After reading this article, people also read:

* UPDATE 2-IMF sees slow Irish recovery, risk to fiscal reformsJun 24, 2010

Romania – Factors to Watch on June 25

June 25 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Friday.

Energy

ROMANIA TOP COURT DELAYS DECISION ON PAY CUTS

Romania’s top court suspended debate on the government’s drastic cuts in public spending, demanded by the IMF as a condition for resuming loans, and may rule on the austerity measures when it meets again on Friday.

[ID:nLDE65N1Q6]

GERMAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN ROMANIA

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle is on a one-day visit to Romania. He is expected to meet President Traian Basescu and Foreign Minister Teodor Baconschi.

PROTESTS

Trade unions plan a rally with up to 4,000 people in front of the president’s headquarters on Friday, protesting against the government’s IMF-backed austerity plan and asking the president not to approve the laws that are now debated by the constitutional court.

Agerpres

ROMANIA M3 MONEY SUPPLY UP 1.0 PCT M/M IN MAY

For a table, double-click [ID:nLDE65N0JF]

RETAIL

Swiss clothes retailer H&M plans to open its first store in Romanian in the first half of 2011.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 1

FONDUL PROPRIETATEA

The listing of the state-owned investment fund Fondul Proprietatea on the Bucharest bourse could happen in the second half of this year, the fund’s head Ionut Popescu told daily Evenimentul Zilei.

The statement comes after the parliament approved some regulations related to the organization of the fund this week.

Evenimentul Zilei, Page 10

EU DEVELOPMENT COMMISSIONER

EU Development Commissioner Andris Piebalgs is expected to meet Finance Minister Sebastian Vladescu and Economy Minister Adreian Videanu of Friday, during his official visit to Romania.

Agerpres

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

click [RO/DIARY], and a calendar of east European economic indicators, see [CONV/DIARY].

For other related news, double click on: ————————————————————— Romania Market Debt [RO-DBT] Romanian forex [RO-FRX] Romania Market Report [ROL/] Romanian money [RO-M] Emerging Market Debt [EMRG/DBT] Emerging forex [EMRG/FRX] All Emerging Markets news [EMRG] CEE indicators [CONV/DIARY] All East Europe News [EEU] E.Europe equities [.CEE] TOP NEWS — Emerging markets [TOP/EMRG] TOP NEWS — Convergence watch [TOP/EAST] Romanian indicators [RO/ECI] Main page of Reuters poll —————————————————————

Germany defends austerity measures ahead of G20

(Reuters) – Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble rejected criticism that Germany was endangering economic recovery with austerity measures, saying the government had a “well-conceived” exit strategy from its stimulus spending.

In a guest column for the Handelsblatt newspaper on Thursday, Schaeuble said he could not understand criticism from abroad that Germany was “wrecking the recovery with austerity measures” because Berlin was doing a lot to stimulate growth.

“There is an implicit accusation that we’re not living up to our international responsibilities as far as economic policies are concerned,” Schaeuble wrote in a contribution for the business daily ahead of the G20 summit this weekend in Toronto.

“I cannot understand this argument because Germany has taken sweeping measures since 2008 to stabilize the economy. We’ve done that on top of all the automatic stabilizers we have (such as higher social welfare spending) that play a much smaller role in countries from which we’re now being criticized.”

Germany recently announced plans for 80 billion euros in budget cuts over the next four years, a package it hopes will bring the structural deficit of Europe’s biggest economy within European Union limits by 2013.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and top White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers wrote in a Wall Street Journal piece on Tuesday that G20 peers should not risk undermining growth for the sake of cutting deficits, echoing a similar call from President Barack Obama.

‘WELL-CONCEIVED EXIT STRATEGY’

Schaeuble pointed to Germany’s budget deficit climbing to five percent of gross domestic product (GDP) as evidence of its commitment to growth-boosting measures.

“It’s true that an abrupt and ill-conceived exit from the stabilization measures could endanger their success,” he said. “But a credit-financed stimulation of demand cannot become a permanent, drug-like fix.

“We need a well-conceived exit strategy. The German government has one. The first consolidation measures won’t take effect until 2011 and amount to less than 0.5 percent of GDP. There’s no way that can be called hitting the brakes.”

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has vigorously defended its plans to pursue the 80 billion euro savings measures euros in the next four years after Obama preached patience in clamping down on public spending.

On Thursday, Chancellor Angela Merkel dismissed criticism in a separate interview with ARD TV that Germany was not doing enough to stimulate its economy.

Merkel said she had told Obama in a phone call that Germany had done much to support economic growth with stimulus measures.

“Germany is doing much more in 2010 for the worldwide economic recovery than (other countries) on average,” she said.

(Writing by Erik Kirschbaum; editing by Mike Peacock)

Germany defends austerity measures ahead of G20

BERLIN, June 24 (Reuters) – Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble rejected criticism that Germany was endangering economic recovery with austerity measures, saying the government had a “well-conceived” exit strategy from its stimulus spending.

In a guest column for the Handelsblatt newspaper on Thursday, Schaeuble said he could not understand criticism from abroad that Germany was “wrecking the recovery with austerity measures” because Berlin was doing a lot to stimulate growth.

“There is an implicit accusation that we’re not living up to our international responsibilities as far as economic policies are concerned,” Schaeuble wrote in a contribution for the business daily ahead of the G20 summit this weekend in Toronto.

“I cannot understand this argument because Germany has taken sweeping measures since 2008 to stabilise the economy. We’ve done that on top of all the automatic stabilisers we have (such as higher social welfare spending) that play a much smaller role in countries from which we’re now being criticised.”

Germany recently announced plans for 80 billion euros in budget cuts over the next four years, a package it hopes will bring the structural deficit of Europe’s biggest economy within European Union limits by 2013.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and top White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers wrote in a Wall Street Journal piece on Tuesday that G20 peers should not risk undermining growth for the sake of cutting deficits, echoing a similar call from President Barack Obama. [ID:nN22169279]

‘WELL-CONCEIVED EXIT STRATEGY’

Schaeuble pointed to Germany’s budget deficit climbing to five percent of gross domestic product (GDP) as evidence of its commitment to growth-boosting measures.

“It’s true that an abrupt and ill-conceived exit from the stabilisation measures could endanger their success,” he said. “But a credit-financed stimulation of demand cannot become a permanent, drug-like fix.

“We need a well-conceived exit strategy. The German government has one. The first consolidation measures won’t take effect until 2011 and amount to less than 0.5 percent of GDP. There’s no way that can be called hitting the brakes.”

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has vigorously defended its plans to pursue the 80 billion euro savings measures euros in the next four years after Obama preached patience in clamping down on public spending.

On Thursday, Chancellor Angela Merkel dismissed criticism in a separate interview with ARD TV that Germany was not doing enough to stimulate its economy. [ID:nLDE65N04E]

Merkel said she had told Obama in a phone call that Germany had done much to support economic growth with stimulus measures.

“Germany is doing much more in 2010 for the worldwide economic recovery than (other countries) on average,” she said. (Writing by Erik Kirschbaum; editing by Mike Peacock)

Australian Finance Minister Tanner to retire

June 24 (Reuters) – Australian Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner on Thursday said he would retire at the coming national election and would not re-contest his marginal Melbourne seat.

Tanner made the announcement in parliament, but said his decision was not related to the ruling Labor Party’s decision to elect Julia Gillard as prime minister to replace Kevin Rudd.

(Reporting by James Grubel; Editing by Ed Davies)

Kuwait confirms interest in China AgBank IPO

June 22 (Reuters) – Kuwait’s finance minister confirmed on Tuesday Kuwaiti interest in taking an $800 million stake in the Agricultural Bank of China [ABC.UL].

Financials

On Monday, sources in Hong Kong had said that the Kuwait Investment Authority, the country’s sovereign wealth fund, was involved in a deal to invest $800 million in the bank’s IPO, which is likely to raise $23 billion. [ID:nTOE65K06U]

The finance minister, Mustapha al-Shamali, was speaking to reporters at Kuwait’s parliament.

(Reporting by Eman Goma, writing by Andrew Hammond, editing by Thomas Atkins)

German borrowing target smaller than expected-paper

June 22 (Reuters) – The German government’s net new borrowing need is likely to be much lower than forecast this year and next, a newspaper reported on Tuesday.

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Thanks to improving tax revenues and lower than expected spending on unemployment benefits, the federal new borrowing requirement was likely to be between 60 billion and 65 billion euros ($74 billion and $80 billion) in 2010, daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung said.

Citing a budget paper from Chancellor Angela Merkel’s ruling centre-right coalition, the paper said net new borrowing in 2011 could total around 55 billion euros — below a figure of nearly 72 billion previously published in mid-term planning.

Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble recently said net new borrowing was likely to come in at around 65 billion euros this year — below a sum previously estimated at some 80 billion. (Writing by Dave Graham; Editing by Jan Dahinten)

Kazakhstan mulls $20/tonne oil export duty

June 22 (Reuters) – Kazakhstan is considering the introduction of a $20 per tonne export duty on crude oil, Finance Minister Bolat Zhamishev said on Tuesday.

“This would be a fixed rate,” he told reporters.

Kazakhstan set its crude oil export duty to zero in January 2009 as global oil prices plunged. (Reporting by Raushan Nurshayeva, writing by Robin Paxton)

Factbox: Colombia’s leading candidates Mockus and Santos

Polls show former defense minister Juan Manuel Santos poised to win the run-off vote against Green Party candidate Antanas Mockus and continue with Uribe’s security and free-market platform.

JUAN MANUEL SANTOS

The wealthy son of one of Colombia’s most powerful families, Santos, 58, is the consummate political insider, a U.S.- and British-trained economist whose great-uncle, Eduardo Santos, also served as president. His cousin is the current vice president.

Santos is a staunch ally of Uribe and promises to keep up military pressure on leftist FARC guerrillas. He benefited from Uribe’s popularity to win by a wide margin in a first-round vote that many pollsters had expected Mockus to lead on the back of corruption and spy scandals that tarnished the government.

Santos was editor of the country’s top newspaper before moving into politics. He has held several posts in recent governments, including finance minister.

As defense minister under Uribe, Santos oversaw the military campaign that largely drove the leftist FARC rebels into remote hill and jungle regions — major victories included the dramatic rescue of French-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt along with three U.S. defense contractors held hostage by the guerrillas.

He was also in charge of a bombing raid in Ecuadorean territory that killed the FARC’s No. 2 commander — a huge blow to the rebels but also damaging to Colombia’s relations with neighboring Ecuador and Venezuela.

Lacking the natural charisma of his predecessor, Santos paid the political price for scandals under Uribe that include numerous extrajudicial killings of innocent citizens by the army.

But he revamped his campaign and won a May 30 first round easily, thanks in part to large numbers of people voting in newly safe rural areas where Uribe is most popular.

ANTANAS MOCKUS

The son of Lithuanian artists, Mockus, 58, was married in a circus tent and is as famous for his outlandish behavior as he is for helping Bogota shed its reputation as a violent, chaotic capital.

He sports a beard that recalls Abraham Lincoln, quotes philosophers Immanuel Kant and Soren Kierkegaard in meandering speeches and has a penchant for dressing in a spandex costume as “Super Citizen” during his two terms as Bogota mayor.

Such antics are tame compared with his years as the rector of Colombia’s National University, when he once urinated from a balcony and bared his backside to a rowdy crowd in the university’s auditorium.

Despite the quirks, the French-trained mathematician and philosopher won the respect of many Colombians by helping bring order to Bogota, known in the early 1990s for car bombings by drugs gangs, kidnappings and drive-by murders.

By the end of his second term in 2003, homicide rates had dropped, a modern public transport system had eased congestion and the city was fiscally sound.

Mockus surged in popularity during the first-round campaign and many voters say he presents an alternative to the Uribe administration, popular for gains against leftist rebels but rocked by a string of human rights and corruption scandals.

He is popular among young Colombians and has effectively used Internet services such as Twitter and Facebook to spread his message. Mockus is the candidate of Colombia’s recently founded Green Party, but his campaign has focused on clean politics rather than environmental issues.

Earlier this year, Mockus announced he had Parkinson’s disease, but that his illness was at an early stage and would not affect his work. His ratings continued to rise after the news. But he has also suffered from what even he calls his “own goals” giving confusing answers on key questions such as relations with Venezuela and frankly calling for tax raises.

(Reporting by Bogota newsroom, Editing by Sandra Maler)

UPDATE 1-Germany likely closer to 2 pct 2010 growth- FinMin

KIEL, Germany, June 20 (Reuters) – German economic growth may come closer to 2 percent in 2010 than previously expected, Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Sunday, but will hardly top 1.5 percent on average over the coming years.

In late January, the government forecast gross domestic product in Europe’s largest economy would expand by 1.4 percent in 2010, though some economists have said a figure as high as 3 percent is possible.

“Perhaps we will come closer to the 2 percent figure than we even dared hope just a couple of weeks ago,” Schaeuble said during a speech at an award ceremony in Kiel.

Earlier this month, policymakers including Schaeuble had said the German economy should grow faster than expected, with the recovery gathering pace markedly during the current quarter.

Yet in a separate interview with German weekly magazine WirtschaftsWoche, Schaeuble said growth would not reach much beyond 1.5 percent in the next few years, partly due to demographic trends.

Some policymakers and research institutes have expressed concern that the austerity measures being launched by European governments to head off a spread of the debt crisis begun in Greece will hamper economic growth.

United States President Barack Obama last week said public finance problems should be addressed “in the medium term” — a warning that clamping down budgets should not be done at the expense of recovery. Schaeuble defended the Germany’s decision to launch its biggest austerity drive since World War Two saying economic growth alone would not enable the country to consolidate its ballooning deficit.

“The U.S. is allowed to think that they can solve their exorbitant household deficits through strong growth. I don’t think so but I don’t want to give them any advice,” he said.

“There is no way we could do this in Germany, because we will hardly be able to reach beyond 1.5 percent sustainable economic growth on average over the next few years, partly because of our demographic development.”

Schaeuble said it was his duty to address the causes of the crisis, one of them being public deficits — a realisation the U.S. was “currently repressing a little”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday said Europe would push for a swift exit from fiscal stimulus programmes and a focus on budget consolidation at the G20 meeting next week.

“European participants are of the opinion that this is urgently necessary to prevent such crises from happening again in the future,” Merkel said in her weekly podcast. (Additional reporting and writing by Sarah Marsh; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

Zimbabwe stops seizure of central bank assets

HARARE, June 20 (Reuters) – Zimbabwe has ordered creditors owed millions of dollars by its bankrupt central bank to stop auctioning the bank’s property, local state media reported on Sunday, saying the seizures were tantamount to asset stripping.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) failed to pay local and foreign companies about $1 billion mainly for fertiliser, seed, tractor and vehicle imports at the 2008 peak of an economic crisis which many people blame on President Robert Mugabe’s policies.

Finance Minister Tendai Biti told the state-run Sunday Mail newspaper that the unity government Mugabe formed with rival Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai had decided to halt the auctioning of the bank’s assets by creditors.

“We (the cabinet) agreed to stop the attachment and auctioning of RBZ properties with immediate effect,” he said, adding the government would soon publish a supporting legal notice. “It has become clear that some individuals and companies are acting like vultures after buying the bank’s assets for a song.”

Neither Biti nor RBZ governor Gideon Gono were available for immediate comment.

Biti also told the newspaper that a curator or judicial manager should be appointed to handle the central bank’s debts.

Zimbabwe’s central bank, which the IMF has certified as broke and is struggling to pay its own workers, is now playing a marginal role in efforts to revive the country after being at the centre of the economy for years.

Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change blames Gono, a Mugabe ally, for contributing to the economic collapse and wants the power-sharing government to appoint a new governor.

In power since Zimbabwe’s independence from Britain in 1980, Mugabe denies his ZANU-PF party is responsible for ruining one of Africa’s most promising economies and has resisted pressure to remove the central bank governor.

The 86-year-old president says the economy has been wrecked by sabotage by his domestic opponents and sanctions imposed by Western powers angry about his seizures of white-owned farms for redistribution to landless blacks. (Editing by David Dolan and David Stamp)