G7 Summit in UK Ends with Agreement on
Global Minimum Tax and Common Threats
·
No Agreement on Coal as US Dithers
·
Promises 1bn Covid Shots in
next one year, research time for new vaccine development promised cut to 100
days from 300
·
Solidarity with Hong Kong and Xinjiang Muslim Rights
·
Summit Ends
With Agreement on Global Minimum Tax and Common Threats
June
13, 2021
[ABS News Service/14.06.2021]
The
world’s wealthiest large democracies issued a joint communiqué that stressed
the need for drastic action to end the pandemic and counter China. President
Biden then had tea with Queen Elizabeth and said the monarch reminded him of
his mother.
As
the leaders of the world’s wealthiest nations wrapped up their first in-person
summit since the outbreak of the pandemic, they released a joint communiqué on
Sunday, underscoring areas of solidarity — and the differences that remain —
when it comes to tackling a host of global crises.
The
group, including President Biden, did not reach agreement on a timeline to
eliminate the use of coal for generating electric power, a failure that climate
activists said was a deep disappointment ahead of a global climate conference
later this year.
The
leaders sought to present a united front even as it remained to be seen how the
plans would be executed.
The
agreement represented a dramatic return of America’s postwar international
diplomacy, and Mr. Biden said it was evidence of the strength of the world’s
democracies in tackling hard problems.
Speaking
to reporters after the summit, Mr. Biden said the leaders’ endorsement of a
global minimum tax would help ensure global equity and a proposal to finance
infrastructure projects in the developing world would counter the influence of
China, providing what he said was a “democratic alternative.”
Those
initiatives, he said, would promote democratic values and not an “autocratic
lack of values.”
“Everyone
at the table understood and understands both the seriousness and the challenges
that we are up against and the responsibility of our proud democracies to step
up and deliver to the rest of the world,” Mr. Biden said.
Prime
Minister Boris Johnson of Britain, who hosted the summit, said that the
gathering was an opportunity to demonstrate “the benefits of democracy.”
That
would start, he said, with agreements to speed up the effort to vaccinate the
world, which he called “the greatest feat in medical history.”
Asked
about the failure to go further on climate policy by setting firm timelines,
Mr. Johnson said that the general criticism was misplaced and failed to take into
account the full scope of what was achieved during the summit.
“I
think it has been a highly productive few days,” he said.
Mr.
Biden hoped to use his first trip abroad to show that democracy, as a system of
government, remained capable of addressing the world’s most pressing
challenges.
The
communiqué issued on Sunday fleshed out some of the proposals that have
dominated the summit and was explicit in the need to counter the rise of China.
“Three
years ago, China wasn’t even mentioned in the G7 communiqué,” according to an
administration official who briefed reporters on its contents. “This year,
there is a section on China that speaks to the importance of coordinating on
and responding to China’s nonmarket economic practices and the need to speak out
against human rights abuses, including in Xinjiang and Hong Kong.”
The
communiqué promised “action against forced labor practices in the agricultural,
solar, and garment sectors.”
It
also noted the need for “supply chain resilience and technology standards so
that democracies are aligned and supporting each other.”
At
the same time, the nations agreed to an overhaul of international tax laws,
unveiling a broad agreement that aims to stop large multinational companies
from seeking out tax havens.
The
administration official called it a “historic endorsement to end the race to
the bottom in corporate taxation with a global minimum tax that will help fund
domestic renewal and grow the middle class.”
But
for all the good will and declarations of unity, there were questions about how
the proposals would be translated into real-world action.
For
instance, on the tax laws, a number of hurdles have yet to be overcome.
The
biggest obstacle to getting a deal finished could come from the United States.
The Biden administration must win approval from a narrowly divided Congress to
make changes to the tax code, and Republicans have shown resistance to Mr.
Biden’s plans.