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ID129051
Title ProperInternational monetary and financial negotiations in times of crises
Other Title Informationthe G20 Pittsburgh summit 2009
LanguageENG
AuthorKamel, Maha S
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The G20 leaders met for their third summit in Pittsburgh in September 2009. They agreed to institutionalize the G20 as the premier forum for their global economic cooperation, shift 5% of IMF quota shares and 3% of the World Bank's shares from the overrepresented advanced countries to underrepresented dynamic-markets and developing countries, and continue with their fiscal stimuli and measures to sustain a durable global economic recovery following the global recession of 2008/09. More importantly, they launched negotiations on global imbalances within a newly formed G20 mechanism; the Framework for Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Growth. This article focuses on the financial negotiations that took place in this summit, with the aim of explaining how the aforementioned outcome was reached. It focuses on actors' negotiating strategies as an intervening variable explaining the outcome, and compares the strategies of three important actors: the United States, China and Germany.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Negotiation Vol.19, No.1; Jan-April 2014; p.154-188
Journal SourceInternational Negotiation Vol.19, No.1; Jan-April 2014; p.154-188
Key WordsFinancial Negotiations ;  IMF Reform ;  Global Financial Crisis ;  Rising Powers ;  G20 ;  Pittsburgh Summit 2009 ;  Global Leadership ;  International Organization - IO ;  International Cooperation - IC ;  Economic Cooperation ;  International Monetary Cooperation ;  International Monetary Fund - IMF ;  Financial Cooperation ;  China ;  United States - US ;  Germany ;  Global Summit ;  Economic Strategy