Archive - Nov 13, 2008

Date

G-20 Leaders Huddle Around Global Economic Crisis

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Photo: <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/thomashawk/2838415764/">Thomas Hawk (flickr)</a>
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Photo: Thomas Hawk (flickr)

Leaders of the world’s 20 major trading countries will meet November 15 to hash out reforms to the international financial system in the wake of an economic crisis that has shattered stock markets and balance sheets.

The BBC says Europe will make the case for new rules on banking supervision and will propose an IMF bailout package, but it points to the important role of China as well as emerging economies at the table.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon plans to attend the meeting, and says he'll urge leaders to focus on the plight of the world's poor. "We must do everything we can to alleviate the impact of the economic crisis on world's most vulnerable people," Ban told reporters.

Michael Lewis on the End of Wall Street as We Know It

Michael Lewis, the author of my favorite non-fiction account of 80's Wall Street excesses*, Liar's Poker, has written a scathing piece about the collapse of the Wall Street investment banks.

I agree with Bill Early that it would be a shame if the current economic crisis led to a retreat from free markets, but I also believe that honest accounts of the greed and excess that led to the current collapse are required to restore faith in the markets. As Lewis highlights, investors are right to not trust the recommendations of ratings agencies and investment bankers: they were too busy focusing on earning massive commissions for themselves to think about the treacherous route they were leading us down.

The sooner the scams can be exposed and the hucksters run out of town (or, when appropriate, put behind bars), the sooner faith in the system can begin to be restored.

* Tom Wolfe's fictional account of Wall Street in the 80's, Bonfire of the Vanities, remains my favorite account of that era. Wolfe recently gave a funny interview with NPR about the whereabouts of the "Masters Of The Universe" he described in that book.


Stories We're Watching

'Quiet Corruption' Hurting Africa's Poor

San Francisco Chronicle - Mon, 03/15/2010 - 09:22
A World Bank report says teachers and other public servants who don't show up for work are fueling "quiet corruption" throughout Africa that is disproportionately hurting the continent's poor.

Industrial Output Up; Hopes For Factories Grow

NPR - Mon, 03/15/2010 - 08:45
Industrial production edged up 0.1 percent in February, beating expectations and marking the eighth straight monthly increase.

Cash For Work and Planning for the Future

Mercy Corps Blog - Sun, 03/14/2010 - 23:23
Two Mercy Corps workers talk with 62-year-old Rosemarie Joseph in her makeshift tent at the Lycée Jean-Marie Vincent displacement camp in Port-au-Prince.

Price Gap Spices Sugar Fight

Wall Street Journal - Tue, 03/16/2010 - 21:09
The battle over U.S. sugar quotas is flaring once more as the gap between domestic and much-lower global prices reaches its widest level in at least a decade.

Ushahidi - Africa’s Gift to Silicon Valley

International Herald Tribune - Sun, 03/14/2010 - 12:08
A small Kenyan-born Web site is bringing crowdsourcing to disaster relief and other humanitarian causes.

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