Finance chiefs from the G7 industrialised nations gather in Paris on Monday for two days of talks aimed at forging a united front as the Middle East war roils economic prospects worldwide. France, which currently chairs the rotating presidency of the Group of Seven, faces the tricky task of keeping dialogue open as trade feuds spurred by US President Donald Trump’s tariff blitz compound geopolitical tensions.
Reducing reliance on China’s vast holdings of rare earths — crucial for the AI boom that has underpinned economic growth in recent years — is also at the top of the agenda. “The way the global economy has developed over the past 10 years now is clearly not sustainable,” French Finance Minister Roland Lescure told journalists last week.
He noted in particular the surging US budget deficit, a lack of technological innovation in Europe, and China’s efforts to counter slumping consumer spending and industrial over-capacity that has pushed its companies to elbow into overseas markets. “Multilateralism can work,” Lescure said, but “these discussions are not easy — I’m not going to tell you that we agree on everything, including obviously with our American friends”.
Trump’s combative, transactional approach to dealing with allies and rivals alike has unnerved G7 leaders as they grapple with the threat of both stagnant growth and surging inflation stemming from the war in the Middle East. A final press conference by the finance chiefs is set for midday Tuesday.
German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil said the G7 was “the right framework” for talking to the United States about ending the Iran war. “This war is massively damaging economic development. That is why everything must be done to bring the war to a permanent end, to stabilise the region again, and to ensure free shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz,” he said in a statement.
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