WASHINGTON(AP)
Finance officials from the world's top economic powers
endorsed a plan Friday to stem the worst financial crisis in more
than a half-century.
The officials from the Group of Seven countries issued the
five-point plan aimed at reversing a credit crisis that has
unhinged Wall Street and markets around the globe. They pledged to
take "decisive action and use all available tools."
Under the plan, the countries vowed to protect major banks and
to prevent their failure. They also committed to working to get
credit flowing more freely again, support the efforts of banks to
raise money from both public and private sources, bolster deposit
insurance and revive the battered mortgage financing market.
"The current situation calls for urgent and exceptional
action," the G7 finance ministers said in a joint
statement.
To that end, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the U.S.
government will move ahead with a plan to buy stock in financial
institutions. The Bush administration received authority to make
direct purchases of stock in banks in the $700 billion financial
rescue bill Congress passed last week.
Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke met with their
counterparts from the world's six other richest countries as
the rout of financial markets sped ahead in the face of dramatic
rescue efforts in the U.S. and abroad.
Besides the United States, the G7 countries are Japan, Germany,
Britain, France, Italy and Canada.
"There was an overwhelming consensus that a coordinated
approach is necessary," German's Finance Minister Peer
Steinbrueck said after the meeting.
Aside from the important details on bank stock purchases that
Paulson offered, the finance officials did not provide specifics
beyond their five-point action plan. The one-page joint statement
from the G7 financial officials was rare in its brevity. The
statements usually issued by the G7 run multiple pages.
By adopting a broad set of common goals, individual countries
will have leeway to develop specific remedies that best suit their
needs, Paulson explained. The United States and other G7 countries
have unveiled a number of bold plans already aimed at shoring up
banks, protecting bank depositors and thawing frozen credit.
Whether Wall Street will be buoyed by the finance ministers'
pledges is another matter.
"I think the markets will wait and see whether all of these
policy steps will make a difference," said Mark Zandi, chief
economist at Moody's Economy.com. "I think investors are
panicked. They are not going to stop selling until they are
convinced that these steps will work."
As individual countries move forward on relief efforts, actions
"should be taken in ways that protect taxpayers," the
finance officials said.
Fear has tightened its grip on investors worldwide even as the
United States and other countries have taken a series of radical
actions including unprecedented coordinated interest rate cuts by
the Federal Reserve and other major central banks.
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrials, already down 21
percent for the week, dropped nearly 700 points more in the opening
minutes of trading but made up much of that fresh loss in the last
hour. The index closed 128 points lower for its worst week ever.
Stock markets in Europe and Asia also took another plunge.
"Never has it been more essential to find collective
solutions to ensure stable and efficient financial markets and
restore the health of the world economy," Paulson said.
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Associated Press Writers Desmond Butler and Martin Crutsinger
contributed to this report.
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