'IMF should warn in advance on financial turbulence'
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown wants International Monetary Fund to give early warning on financial turbulence.
"In a wider role the IMF -- working with the Financial Stability Forum -- should be at the heart of an early warning system for financial turbulence affecting the global economy," Brown said in his meeting with the leaders of Indian and British industry here.
After the Asian crisis, the international community had set up the Financial Stability Forum to better understand financial markets and their interactions.
Brown's remarks came on a day when the Indian stock market tumbled by 1,408.35 points -- the biggest single-day loss -- shaving off over Rs 6 trillion from investors' wealth on concerns of US slowdown enveloping the global economy.
The US economy with a huge 3.5 trillion dollar world trade is considered to be accounting for 25 per cent of the
global consumer spendings.
Seeking changes in the structures of the IMF, World Bank and G-8 club of rich nations to reflect rise of India and
Asia, Brown said these institutions should be equipped for a world where national problems can quickly become global.
"Contagion can move as swiftly as the fastest communication," he said.
Noting that India was making powerful contribution to the world economy, Brown said, "In the last 15 years you have doubled your national income".
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