In recent weeks, the world has been
politely standing by and watching how things play out with the fiscal
stimulus and latest bank-bailout plans in Washington. Yes, there's been some
grumbling overseas about "buy American" provisions in the stimulus bill, but
for the most part, officials elsewhere don't want to step on the toes of a
new President to whom they are favorably disposed. They also don't want to
endanger legislation that they hope will help jump-start the global economy.
Just wait a couple of months,
though. Politicians from Beijing to Berlin to Brasília see the current
crisis as the product of a messed-up global financial infrastructure
dominated by the U.S., and they will soon be pushing for big
changes--whether Americans like them or not.
All this will begin to gel on April
2, when the newish international organization known as the G-20--the leaders
of 19 of the world's biggest national economies, plus the European
Union--meets in London. An unofficial meeting has already taken place, at
the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where G-20 officials (with
the conspicuous exception of those from the U.S.) made speeches, conversed
in the halls and gave a sense of the direction in which the world outside
the U.S. wants to head. (Read TIME's special report on Davos 2009.)
FULL STORY
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1877388,00.html