The Australian - The era of US global economic dominance is over and
the world now needs a new and "more just" financial system, Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev said today. "The time of domination by one
economy and one currency has been consigned to the past once and for
all," Mr Medvedev said in an address to a Russian-German development
forum, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at his side.

"We must work together towards building a new and more just
financial-economic system in the world based on the principles of
multipolarity, supremacy of the law and taking account of mutual
interests."

The current crisis proved that even with its vast economic resources
the United States was not in a position to play the role of
"mega-regulator" and that a new system based on collective management
was needed, he said.

"We simply need new mechanisms of collective decision-making and
collective responsibility," Mr Medvedev said...


His comments came a day after Russia's powerful Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin lashed out at US economic "irresponsibility" for the
global financial crisis.

"Everything happening now in the economic and financial sphere began
in the United States," Mr Putin told a televised government meeting.

"This is not the irresponsibility of specific individuals but the
irresponsibility of the system which claims leadership," he said.

Mr Putin's remarks, made hours before the US Senate approved a $US700
billion ($A888 billion) Government bailout plan for the country's
financial sector, were rebuffed by the White House, which called them
"unfair" finger-pointing.

Russia's young stock markets, rarely predictable in normal times, have
swung wildly in recent weeks as the scope of the US-rooted crisis has
become clear, with regulators repeatedly suspending trading after
sharp drops.

Although Russia's Central Bank still holds massive US dollar reserves,
the Kremlin has in the past two years sought to diversify the
country's holdings, notably by boosting holdings in euros.

New housing and automobile purchases in Russia, two closely watched
indicators of Russia's economic health, are heavily dependent on bank
financing and the crisis has reportedly taken a toll in those two sectors.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24437897-12335,00.html

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