Berliner Boersenzeitung - G7 finance chiefs meet to seek common stance on unstable ground

EUR -
AED 4.274522
AFN 72.74806
ALL 95.444024
AMD 426.573292
ANG 2.083965
AOA 1068.485433
ARS 1631.920343
AUD 1.626255
AWG 2.095069
AZN 1.979595
BAM 1.955678
BBD 2.335854
BDT 142.541075
BGN 1.943665
BHD 0.437373
BIF 3453.467319
BMD 1.163927
BND 1.485445
BOB 8.013498
BRL 5.84478
BSD 1.159727
BTN 110.915056
BWP 15.685018
BYN 3.184201
BYR 22812.971677
BZD 2.332454
CAD 1.606819
CDF 2624.655921
CHF 0.910662
CLF 0.026531
CLP 1044.194075
CNY 7.908594
CNH 7.903508
COP 4285.207223
CRC 524.867138
CUC 1.163927
CUP 30.844069
CVE 110.258097
CZK 24.289122
DJF 206.51707
DKK 7.472307
DOP 68.35572
DZD 154.997296
EGP 61.639835
ERN 17.458907
ETB 186.964294
FJD 2.567737
FKP 0.866061
GBP 0.863454
GEL 3.095931
GGP 0.866061
GHS 13.465157
GIP 0.866061
GMD 84.391673
GNF 10168.73162
GTQ 8.843446
GYD 242.594811
HKD 9.119543
HNL 30.855068
HRK 7.532592
HTG 151.935756
HUF 357.855236
IDR 20600.34621
ILS 3.36494
IMP 0.866061
INR 111.410814
IQD 1519.204882
IRR 1540341.158909
ISK 143.803547
JEP 0.866061
JMD 183.078537
JOD 0.825232
JPY 184.980029
KES 150.734469
KGS 101.785367
KHR 4649.706303
KMF 494.668888
KPW 1047.535627
KRW 1762.045861
KWD 0.360247
KYD 0.966439
KZT 547.67571
LAK 25416.408675
LBP 103878.696142
LKR 387.915713
LRD 212.226712
LSL 19.129302
LTL 3.436774
LVL 0.704048
LYD 7.390537
MAD 10.69893
MDL 20.115741
MGA 4872.69492
MKD 61.636141
MMK 2443.626912
MNT 4166.750252
MOP 9.360514
MRU 46.343098
MUR 55.147131
MVR 17.926368
MWK 2010.974093
MXN 20.091592
MYR 4.606943
MZN 74.372831
NAD 19.129302
NGN 1591.821716
NIO 42.695668
NOK 10.78851
NPR 177.463889
NZD 1.98215
OMR 0.447822
PAB 1.159727
PEN 3.954052
PGK 5.057683
PHP 71.676988
PKR 322.883184
PLN 4.237626
PYG 7067.557499
QAR 4.240135
RON 5.24594
RSD 117.402649
RUB 82.631926
RWF 1695.493845
SAR 4.353127
SBD 9.364006
SCR 15.935002
SDG 698.949152
SEK 10.845122
SGD 1.486602
SHP 0.868989
SLE 28.69167
SLL 24406.972326
SOS 662.758505
SRD 43.244492
STD 24090.941556
STN 24.508994
SVC 10.147365
SYP 128.643156
SZL 19.124803
THB 37.885214
TJS 10.773925
TMT 4.073745
TND 3.394987
TOP 2.802457
TRY 53.228252
TTD 7.871507
TWD 36.610182
TZS 3032.813505
UAH 51.327886
UGX 4391.725034
USD 1.163927
UYU 46.427093
UZS 13914.128835
VES 612.470674
VND 30686.938687
VUV 136.706218
WST 3.171466
XAF 655.915933
XAG 0.014818
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.145571
XCG 2.090169
XDR 0.815749
XOF 655.915933
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.770635
ZAR 19.031725
ZMK 10476.757191
ZMW 21.831633
ZWL 374.78406
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.73

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    51.38

    -0.29%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    86.61

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.66

    +0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    33.01

    -1%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    24.6

    +0.85%

  • AZN

    -2.7200

    187.03

    -1.45%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    65.36

    -0.57%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    14.94

    -1.14%

  • BCC

    0.0500

    67.16

    +0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.87

    +0.39%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.5

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    16.64

    +0.96%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    104.23

    -0.51%

  • BP

    -0.5100

    44.36

    -1.15%

G7 finance chiefs meet to seek common stance on unstable ground
G7 finance chiefs meet to seek common stance on unstable ground / Photo: JULIEN DE ROSA - AFP

G7 finance chiefs meet to seek common stance on unstable ground

Finance chiefs from the G7 industrialised nations gathered in Paris on Monday for two days of talks aimed at forging a united front as the Middle East war roils economic prospects worldwide.

Text size:

France, which currently chairs the rotating presidency of the Group of Seven, faces the tricky task of keeping dialogue open as trade feuds spurred by US President Donald Trump's tariff blitz compound geopolitical tensions.

Reducing reliance on China's vast holdings of rare earths -- crucial for the AI boom that has underpinned economic growth in recent years -- is also at the top of the agenda.

"We are facing significant challenges -- war in the Middle East, obviously, multilateral imbalances that are not sustainable, and the stakes regarding rare earths, critical materials and development aid," French Finance Minister Roland Lescure told journalists Monday.

He noted in particular the surging US budget deficit, a lack of technological innovation in Europe, and China's efforts to counter slumping consumer spending and industrial over-capacity that has pushed its companies to elbow into overseas markets.

"I believe that today, we are going to show that multilateralism is useful, and it works," Lescure said. "We have... to commit ourselves to figure out a return to a more sustainable growth model."

But the meeting, which also aims to lay the groundwork for the G7 summit meeting in Evian, France, next month, comes after US President Donald Trump met with China's President Xi Jinping, without appearing to secure any breakthrough on either the war against Iran or trade and geopolitical tensions.

Trump's combative, transactional approach to dealing with allies and rivals alike is also unnerving G7 leaders as they grapple with the threat of both stagnant growth and surging inflation.

"We can do a lot to... calm the markets and give positive, let me say, momentum in a way that we have these discussions here," said German central bank chief Joachim Nagel, who was attending alongside European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde.

"I'm always worried -- that's my job!" Lagarde told journalists as she arrived.

- 'Economic security' -

Even a shared recognition of the challenges would be considered a victory for the French government, which is hoping to issue two joint statements after the discussions.

Finance ministers from Kenya, Brazil, India and South Korea have also been invited for talks on Tuesday, when a closing press conference is set for midday.

The talks come days after Trump's trip to Beijing for talks with President Xi Jinping failed to provide a clear breakthrough on easing tariffs or ending the war in the Middle East.

China has been making inroads in much of the G7 nations' backyards, and is increasingly willing to play hardball on trade as a key supplier of both raw materials and inexpensive finished goods.

"Up to now, the problem of macroeconomic imbalances was addressed... with regards to global financial stability," said Pierre Jaillet, a researcher at France's Institute for International and Strategic Affairs (IRIS).

But now officials are looking "through the optic of economic security: trade surpluses or deficits can reflect vulnerabilities or dependencies, in particular with critical minerals or energy", and the risk of supply chain disruptions, Jaillet told AFP.

The G7 goal is to "ensure that we don't depend on any one country -- China, without naming names -- for our rare earth supplies", Lescure told journalists last week.

And oil and gas security has become even more crucial with the Middle East war.

"We must do for critical materials what we did with energy in the 1970s," Lescure said, and find common cause for dealing with any crisis.

- 'Common toolbox' -

France is hoping to create a "common toolbox" to combat market disruptions to key raw materials, Lescure said, via strategic trade deals or interventionist measures such as price floors, quotas or tariffs.

It also wants to promote "multilateral projects" among countries to develop their own extraction and refining capabilities, such as a French-Japanese factory to produce and recycle rare earths and magnets and other minerals under construction in southwest France.

The French state has invested 106 million euros ($124 million) in the project, which aims to provide all of France's needs by 2030.

Using financial aid to strike deals in developing countries that encourage private investments is also a way forward, Lescure said.

(H.Schneide--BBZ)