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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

As summit leaders gather, so do protesters

Steven Thomma And Julie Sell McClatchy

LONDON – President Barack Obama heads into a global economic summit today warning that the world can no longer depend on the U.S. to be the consumer-driven engine of economic growth and that other nations will have to step up and do more.

“The world has become accustomed to the United States being a voracious consumer market and the engine that drives a lot of economic growth worldwide,” he said Wednesday. He cautioned that the U.S. eventually will have to scale back its appetite for the world’s goods to pay the bills for all the stimulus spending it’s doing.

“If there’s going to be renewed growth, it can’t just be the United States as the engine,” he said. “Everybody is going to have to pick up the pace.”

Outside, in the streets of London, violent protests erupted as thousands vented their anger over lost jobs and what they decried as the excesses of capitalism.

The global leaders gathered here, however, focused on how to go forward. One key debate heading into the summit’s main working session today was over how much more each government should spend to stimulate its own economy.

The U.S., the United Kingdom and China favor huge government stimulus programs, while France and Germany emphasize tough new regulations.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrived in London Wednesday, vigorously pushing for more regulation.

“We do not want results that have no impact in practice,” Merkel said at a London news conference with Sarkozy. “We want the kind of results that are really an outcome and change the world.”

Sarkozy repeated his demand for the creation of a new international financial regulator. Both also called for increased registration and transparency of hedge funds, as well as a list of tax havens.

Obama said that the U.S., Britain, France and Germany were all in broad agreement on the need to stimulate their economies and better regulate financial systems. The differences between countries, he argued, is “just arguing at the margins.”

Mindful that many countries attending the summit blame the financial centers of New York and London for the mess, Obama conceded the U.S. share of responsibility.

He added, “I’m less interested in identifying blame than fixing the problem.”

Outside, in the streets, an estimated 4,000 demonstrators virtually emptied a swath of The City – London’s financial district – on Wednesday, and by late afternoon a mob attacked a branch of the Royal Bank of Scotland, a British bank that was nationalized with taxpayer funds late last year.

Riot police were called in after demonstrators, many wearing black bandanas to cover their faces, broke windows of the branch, which was closed ahead of the march, and entered it.