Saturday, 15 November 2014

Vladimir Putin at the G20 in Brisbane


Putin says Russia prepared 

for oil price collapse as more 

sanctions threatened

At G20 summit, Russian president says he regards sanctions over Ukraine as pointless, illegal and likely to harm world trade




14 November, 2014


Vladimir Putin has admitted for the first time that he is prepared for his country to face a “catastrophic” slump in oil prices, as David Cameron said Europe would have no choice but to step up sanctions if the Russian president did not abide by previous agreements to respect Ukraine’s independence.

Putin was speaking before a bilateral meeting with Cameron on the margins of the G20 summit in Brisbane. The meeting is likely to be a bruising affair, especially after the British prime minister likened Russia to Nazi Germany, saying Europe had learned lessons from history about how a big country could bully others.

Putin said Russia’s economy had the reserves to withstand a collapse in oil revenues, but added: “We are considering all the scenarios including the so-called catastrophic fall of prices for energy resources, which is entirely possible and we admit it.”

He said he regarded sanctions as pointless, illegal and likely to harm not just Russian but world trade. “This contradicts international law because sanctions can only be imposed within the framework of the United Nations and its security council.”

He claimed that as many as 300,000 German jobs could be at risk if there were no contracts with Russia. Putin is also due to see Angela Merkel at the summit.
The Russian economy is forecast by its central bank to run zero growth next year, and the value of the rouble has fallen. Russia gets half its total budget revenue from oil and natural gas taxes.

British government sources are increasingly confident that sanctions limiting the ability of Russian banks to raise capital are taking their toll. Britain has been urging the Russians to stand by a ceasefire agreement signed in Minsk in September and to stop sending Russian material and arms across the border to rebel-held regions of Ukraine.

Cameron told reporters: “It’s possible to stand by the Minsk agreement. It’s not a perfect agreement from anyone’s point of view, but it has some key parts to it, about Russian troops and about borders and about respecting Ukraine’s sovereignty. I think there’s a very clear choice for Russia of which path it takes. If it takes the Minsk path we could progressively see normalisation of relations between Russia and Ukraine, you could see Ukraine’s sovereignty and elections respected, you could see the removal of sanctions if that were to happen.

But the other path of not respecting the Minsk agreement, continuing to undermine Ukrainian sovereignty, continuing to see Russian troops in Ukraine and Russian tanks and the rest of it – I don’t think Europe would have a choice but to maintain the sanctions we have, to start looking at further measures that could be taken if Russia takes further steps, and to putting relationships between European countries and Russia on a very different basis.”

Earlier, Cameron said: “We have to be clear what we are dealing with here is a large state bullying a smaller state. We have seen the consequences of that in the past and we should learn the lessons of history and make sure we do not let it happen again. I don’t think there is a military solution to this, but the sanctions have had some effect. You can see that in what has happened to the Russian rouble, what has happened to the Russian stock market and the difficulty the Russian banks have in gaining finance.”
The Australian prime minister and G20 host, Tony Abbott, has been at the forefront of the criticism of Putin. It is thought that 38 Australians were among the 298 people killed on flight MH17, the civilian plane shot down over Ukraine in July. Such is the anger in Australia that there were protests against Putin outside his hotel in Brisbane.

Australia sent three ships to its northern coast after a flotilla of Russian navy vessels appeared there this week.

Abbott said: “It is our clear understanding on the evidence so far this plane was clearly shot down by Russian-backed rebels most likely using Russian-supplied equipment. I think there is heavy responsibility on Russia to come clean and to atone.

It is part of a regrettable pattern, whether it is the bullying of Ukraine, the increasing number of Russian military aircraft flying into the airspace of Japan, European countries or the task group in the South Pacific. Russia would be so much more attractive if it was aspiring to be a superpower for peace and freedom and prosperity, if it were trying to be a superpower for ideas and values, instead of trying to recreate the lost glories of tsarism or the old Soviet Union.”

The two summits in Brisbane ending on Sunday had originally been intended by Australia to focus on job creation, improved growth and unblocking barriers to trade deals between the US and EU.

The issue of climate change given a new momentum by the China-US deal is also likely to feature as Australia battle to keep the agenda manageable.

But the Australians are also keen to pick up initiatives to clamp down on corporate tax avoidance by shaking up a creaking international tax system that is unfit to tackle multinationals capable of shifting profits to low-tax jurisdictions.

Cameron made tax transparency a big theme of the British G8 presidency last year and said on Friday that 90 countries had now agreed to cooperate on sharing tax information in line with guidelines set out by the OECD, the international body charged with modernising the international tax system.

He added he “damn well expected” companies to pay corporation tax in full in the UK adding the conversation and culture was changing in boardrooms worldwide as executives realised they had to run defensible policies on paying tax.

Cameron believes the culture change is being driven by popular anger directed at companies caught avoiding taxes, but also by unprecedented levels of cooperation between tax jurisdictions threatening to expose the way company accountants try to transfer profits to low-tax jurisdictions.
    
But Cameron held off from directly criticising the new European commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, over claims that he had for decades overseen a regime as Luxembourg prime minister designed to lure companies to base operations in the low-tax country.

Cameron has tried to block Juncker’s appointment as Commission President in the summer, largely due to his federalist views, but faced by other battles on the European stage Cameron refused to directly join the call for Juncker to quit after it had been shown he had designed an effective tax haven in Luxembourg in the centre of Europe.

Cameron may feel as he prepares for potential renegotiations over Britain’s relationship with the EU that he cannot afford to confront Juncker, preferring instead to stress the moral case for companies to pay tax .

The Juncker assault had been given new impetus by a leak of a mass of documents showing the scale of the tax avoidance practised in Luxembourg at a time when Juncker had been prime minister.

Cameron said: “We have a very strong moral case to make now. When you have a 20% corporation tax rate, we damn well expect you to pay it. The culture is changing across the boardrooms round the world – they are having a lot of discussions about whether their strategy over tax is responsible and defensible.”


‘Economic isolation breach of intl law': Top 5 takeaways from Putin ahead of G20


Russian President Vladimir Putin (RIA Novosti/Mikhail Klementiev)
Russian President Vladimir Putin (RIA Novosti/Mikhail Klementiev)

RT,
14 November, 2014

Vladimir Putin says the G20 must address global imbalances together, and economic isolation, especially in the case of sanctions, which not only leads nowhere but is a crude violation of international economic law.
Here are the Russian president’s top takeaways he gave in an interview to TASS ahead of the G20 summit being held in Brisbane, Australia from November 14-15.




G20 great for ground work, but decisions often just hot air

Putin believes the G20 is still a good and relevant platform for world leaders, however, decisions at the summit are often nothing but words. Decisions made there are only carried out when there are in line with the interests of certain global players, like the US.
Decisions are neglected if they don’t fit the agenda of an individual power.


An example is when US Congress blocked the IMF quota, which was intended to enhance the role of developing economies and redistribute quotes. That move was counterproductive, Putin said.

The very fact that US Congress has refused to pass this law indicates that it is the United States that drops out of the general context of resolving the problems facing the international community," the president said.

Everyone must understand that the global economy and finance these days are exceptionally dependent on each other,” he said.

US sanctions violate the very system they created

Sanctions levied against Russia are against the norms of international trade and the core principles of the G20, as they can only be introduced via the United Nations, Putin said.

Sanctions are “against WTO principles and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the GATT. The United States itself created that organization at a certain point. Now it is crudely violating its principles,”Putin explained.

Interconnected economy: What hurts us hurts you


Sanctions against Russia have targeted the finance, energy and weaponry sectors of the economy. Russia’s retaliatory sanctions to ban agricultural imports are having a colossal ripple effect on jobs, social sectors, and growth.

This is especially pertinent to Europe, which is feeling the squeeze of the agricultural export ban to Russia, one its biggest markets.

"Everyone must understand that the global economy and finance these days are exceptionally dependent on each other,” Putin said.

Germany’s economic growth is an example of financial blowback from sanctions with Russia.


US-led trade pacts will create global imbalance

Putin believes that the creation of the 2 US-led trade pacts - one Transatlantic and the other Transpacific - will only create more global imbalance. The US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) doesn’t include China or Russia.


"Of course, we want to get rid of such imbalances, we want to work together, but this can be achieved only through joint efforts,” Putin said.

New economic associations should complement existing institutions

All new emerging economic blocks like BRICS and the so-called ‘new G7’, which in addition to Brazil, Russia, India and China also includes Indonesia, Turkey and Mexico, should come as something complementary to the existing groups, Putin said.

According to purchasing power parity (PPP) BRICS nations have a combined GDP $37.4 trillion, more than the G7’s at $34.7 trillion, Putin said. However, its economic girth doesn't give it the right to start running its own polic

And if we go and say, ‘No, thank you, we are going to do this and that here on our own, and you can do it the way you want it,’ this will only add to the imbalances,” Putin warned.

The Russian president also said that all regional integrations like the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union with Belarus and Kazakhstan shouldn't isolate, but complement, global institutions.


Putin descends on G20 mid 

Cold War MSM panic


The leaders of G20 member states arrive in Australia on the eve of this year's summit - with divisions between the political heavyweights looking wider than ever





Closed G20: Brisbane 


becomes ghost town while 


hosting summit



Brisbane resembles a ghost town ahead of the G20 summit, Friday. Stores operated on reduced hours or were closed for business until the G20 leaves town. 

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