Business | Economy
G-8 finance chiefs talk global warming, oil prices
Finance ministers from the Group of Eight industrialised nations urged oil-producing nations on Saturday to boost output to help stabilise record-high oil and food prices, calling the situation a serious threat to global economic growth.
Osaka: Finance ministers from the Group of Eight industrialised nations urged oil-producing nations on Saturday to boost output to help stabilise record-high oil
and food prices, calling the situation a serious threat to global economic growth.
The world economy faces uncertainty and inflationary pressures because of the recent rise in prices, the G-8 ministers said in a joint statement after two days of talks in Osaka, western Japan.
US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the spike in oil prices to new heights was a problem of supply and demand, and not caused by speculators.
"This is not something that lends itself to short-term solutions," he told reporters after the meeting ended.
He urged countries to let markets work, not rely on subsidies, and pressed oil-producing countries to allow more investment in oil exploration and production.
Paulson and the other G-8 ministers vowed to work together to secure stability and growth, and called for aid to address a looming food crisis in developing nations.
"Elevated commodity prices, especially of oil and food, pose a serious challenge to stable growth worldwide," the statement said.
The agenda for the talks, which began Friday, spanned a range of issues, including troubled financial markets and helping developing nations fight global warming.
The ministers from the G-8 nations - Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the US – also mapped out an agenda for a summit next month in northern Hokkaido.
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