Japan | Abe urges G-7 to avert another economic crisis

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe urged fellow leaders of the Group of Seven advanced economies yesterday to avert another global crisis by acting to rescue the faltering global recovery.
President Barack Obama backed Abe’s call, saying it was crucial not just to put people back to work but also raise wages and maintain the momentum of the recovery.
“We’ve all got a lot of work to do and we agreed to continue to focus on making sure that each country, based on its particular needs and capacities, is taking steps to accelerate growth,” the U.S. president said.
Abe and his counterparts got down to business after a morning stroll through the grounds of Ise Jingu, a tranquil, densely forested shrine that is considered the holiest site in Japan’s indigenous Shinto religion.
During the talks, Abe compared the current global economic situation to conditions just before the 2008 financial crisis. A G-7 summit held in northern Japan paid little attention to the trouble that was brewing, he said.
“We learned a lesson that we failed to respond properly because we did not have a firm recognition of the risks,” Abe told reporters. “This time, we had a thorough discussion and recognized the major risks facing the global economy.”

Japanese Prime Minsiter Shinzo Abe (left) and U.S. President Barack Obama smile at photographers with other leaders of Group of Seven industrial nations at the start of the second working session of the G-7 summit meetings in Shima, Mie Prefecture

Japanese Prime Minsiter Shinzo Abe (left) and U.S. President Barack Obama smile at photographers with other leaders of Group of Seven industrial nations at the start of the second working session of the G-7 summit meetings in Shima, Mie Prefecture

Japanese officials also highlighted joint efforts on corruption, terrorism, global health and migration — which has become a huge headache especially for European nations — as other top priorities.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she didn’t expect any concrete offers in the final communique from other G-7 members to take in refugees. She did say, however, that she had a bilateral meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and told him how much she appreciates the large number of refugees his country is taking in.
Earlier, Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, said “Those who criticize us should rather think how to increase their assistance because what Europe provides is already massive. And honestly speaking, if they [the G-7] don’t take the lead in managing this crisis, nobody else will. I will appeal to G-7 leaders to take up this challenge.”
A possible exit from the European Union by Britain, depending on a June 23 vote, is also hanging over the talks.
The annual summit brings together the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States. It is taking place amid extraordinarily tight security around the remote summit venue, with uniformed police standing guard at close intervals on both sides of roads and randomly in forests, rice fields, soccer fields and other locations.
Protesters were kept far away. A group of several dozen gathered in a nearby city where they were far outnumbered by police and journalists.
Many of the issues to be discussed are linked to other Abe policy priorities, including maritime security, code for concerns over China’s expanding presence in disputed areas of the South China Sea.
After the summit ends this afternoon, Obama plans to visit the peace park in Hiroshima, becoming the first sitting U.S. president to visit the city on which the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb in 1945 in the closing days of World War II. Elaine Kurtenbach & Mari Yamaguchi, Ise, AP

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