Gordon
Brown calls for global government to tackle coronavirus
Ex-PM at
centre of 2008 banks rescue suggests taskforce of leaders and health experts
Larry
Elliott Economics editor
Thu 26 Mar
2020 06.00 GMTLast modified on Thu 26 Mar 2020 08.12 GMT
‘The more
you intervene to deal with the medical emergency, the more you put economies at
risk,’ says Gordon Brown. Photograph: Victoria Jones/PA
Gordon
Brown has urged world leaders to create a temporary form of global government
to tackle the twin medical and economic crises caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
The former
Labour prime minister, who was at the centre of the international efforts to
tackle the impact of the near-meltdown of the banks in 2008, said there was a
need for a taskforce involving world leaders, health experts and the heads of
the international organisations that would have executive powers to coordinate
the response.
A virtual
meeting of the G20 group of developed and developing countries, chaired by
Saudi Arabia, will be held on Thursday, but Brown said it would have been
preferable to have also included the UN security council.
“This is not something that can be dealt with
in one country,” he said. “There has to be a coordinated global response.”
Brown said
the current crisis was different to the one he was involved in. “That was an
economic problem that had economic causes and had an economic solution.
“This is
first and foremost a medical emergency and there has to be joint action to deal
with that. But the more you intervene to deal with the medical emergency, the
more you put economies at risk.”
During the
financial crisis, Brown persuaded other global leaders of the need to bail out
the banks and then hosted a meeting of the G20 in London, which came up with a
$1.1tn rescue package.
Despite
Donald Trump’s “America first” policy, he said it was still possible to get
support for an emergency body with executive powers.
Brown said
his proposed global taskforce would fight the crisis on two fronts. There would
need to be a coordinated effort to find a vaccine, and to organise production,
purchasing and prevent profiteering.
Many
countries have announced economic packages in the past two weeks but Brown said
a taskforce could: make sure the efforts of central banks were coordinated;
take steps to prevent the record flight of capital from emerging market
economies; and agree a joint approach to the use of government spending to
boost growth.
Brown said
there had been resistance in 2008 to using the G20 as a vehicle for tackling
the financial crisis, but that it should be clear to world leaders that there
was no possibility of a go-it-alone approach working.
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“We need
some sort of working executive,” Brown said. “If I were doing it again, I would
make the G20 a broader organisation because in the current circumstances you
need to listen to the countries that are most affected, the countries that are
making a difference and countries where there is the potential for a massive
number of people to be affected - such as those in Africa.”
The World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund needed an increase in their financial
firepower to cope with the impact of the crisis on low- and middle-income
countries, he said.
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