Anglo-American Capitalism on Trial
By JOHN F. BURNS and LANDON THOMAS Jr.
NYT
LONDON — Sitting in a gilded upper room at 10 Downing Street last week listening to Prime Minister Gordon Brown outline his ambitions for reforming the world economy had something of an out-of-this-world feeling. With Mr. Brown seated beneath a 16th-century oil painting of Queen Elizabeth I, it was tempting to imagine for a moment that Britain was again rising grandly to the challenges of the age, in the way of Good Queen Bess.
The occasion was a briefing for reporters on the Group of 20 summit meeting to be held Thursday at a conference center in the London docklands, close to the historic City of London, Britain’s financial hub. Mr. Brown was intense, and prolific with facts. He was also visibly exhausted, hours before leaving on a five-day, 20,000-mile trip to Europe, the United States and Latin America before the conference.
The event for which he was preparing is as weighty as any London has hosted in decades. It will be attended by President Obama and the leaders of 21 other nations, including Europe’s wealthiest countries and Russia, China, and India. Organizers say that those attending generate 80 percent of the world’s wealth, making the gathering a potential powerhouse for global reform.
(More here.)
NYT
LONDON — Sitting in a gilded upper room at 10 Downing Street last week listening to Prime Minister Gordon Brown outline his ambitions for reforming the world economy had something of an out-of-this-world feeling. With Mr. Brown seated beneath a 16th-century oil painting of Queen Elizabeth I, it was tempting to imagine for a moment that Britain was again rising grandly to the challenges of the age, in the way of Good Queen Bess.
The occasion was a briefing for reporters on the Group of 20 summit meeting to be held Thursday at a conference center in the London docklands, close to the historic City of London, Britain’s financial hub. Mr. Brown was intense, and prolific with facts. He was also visibly exhausted, hours before leaving on a five-day, 20,000-mile trip to Europe, the United States and Latin America before the conference.
The event for which he was preparing is as weighty as any London has hosted in decades. It will be attended by President Obama and the leaders of 21 other nations, including Europe’s wealthiest countries and Russia, China, and India. Organizers say that those attending generate 80 percent of the world’s wealth, making the gathering a potential powerhouse for global reform.
(More here.)
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