Achievements at G-20 significant: Pranab

India had its way at the two-day conference of G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors, with finance minister Pranab Mukherjee describing achievements on IMF reforms and the currency war, mainly between the US and China, as “significant”.
“What we have achieved is significant,” Mr Mukherjee said at the conclusion of the G-20 conference, where members endorsed crucial reform of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and asked nations to move toward a “more” market-determined exchange rate and desist from “competitive devaluation of their currencies”.
The decision to give a 6 per cent quota (voting rights) to emerging economies in the IMF, which would see India jump from 11th position to 8th in terms of voting rights in the international body, was announced at the end of the ministerial conference of the G-20, a club of developed and developing nations.
As regards the ongoing currency war, Mr Mukherjee said, “What we expected and particularly what I have commented, that we will have to resolve the (currency) issue through dialogue and not through confrontationist position... (It has been) substantially agreed to.”
Moreover, the minister added, “The development agenda have found place (in talks) and leaders will give their seal of approval at the Seoul Summit to be held on November 11-12.”
The G-20 ministers, he added, have also agreed not to resort to “unilateralism” to deal with complex issues.
“Another phraseology has been used is that there should be no unilateralism and there should be cooperation... unilateral devaluation should not be encouraged,” he said.
Mr Mukherjee had recently suggested in Washington that the currency issue could only be resolved through dialogue and consensus and not through confrontation.

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