Tuesday, December 31, 2019

What is the G-20

The G-20 or group of twenty, is a group of twenty of the most important economies on the planet. It includes 19 independent countries along with the European Union. The Beginnings of the G-20 G-7 The G-20 includes all of the original members of the G-7 along with BRIMCKS (Brazil, Russia, India, Mexico, China, South Korea, and South Africa), and Australia, Argentina, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey. According to the G-20 website, The economies that make up the G20 represent almost 90% of global GDP and two thirds of the worlds population. G-20 Members 1. Argentina2. Australia3. Brazil4. Canada5. China6. France (also a member of the EU)7. Germany (also a member of the EU)8. India9. Indonesia10. Italy (also a member of the EU)11. Japan12. Mexico13. Russia14. Saudi Arabia15. South Africa16. South Korea17. Turkey (an applicant for the EU)18. United Kingdom (also a member of the EU)19. United States20. European Union (members of the EU) Five countries have been invited to participate in the G-20 meeting in 2012 by Mexico, the host country and the chair of the G-20 at the time of the summit: Spain, Benin, Cambodia, Chile, Colombia. G-22 and G-33 list of G-33 members G-20 Goals The G20 has its origin in the 1998 Asian economic crisis. One year later, the finance ministers and central bankers of the most important global economies convened in Berlin, Germany, at a meeting co-sponsored by the finance minister of Canada and the finance minister of Germany. In the wake of the international financial crisis that erupted in 2008, the most serious since the Great Depression (1929), the G20 began to meet at a Leaders level and has since become the most important forum for global economic and financial cooperation and discussion. The G20 is an informal forum for discussion between advanced and emerging countries that seeks to strengthen international cooperation and ensure global economic stability... Its main goals are to coordinate macroeconomic policies to strengthen the global economic recovery; to reshape the international financial architecture; and to promote financial regulations to help prevent another crisis, such as the one in 2008, from occurring again. Another G-33? developing countries Wikipedia.

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