<b>Let the people speak</b>
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<b>Let the people speak</b>

Headline: Let the people speak
Source: Euromoney
Date: September 2001
Author: Peter Lee

       
Sir Edward George
Many bankers Euromoney has spoken to are fearful that anti-capitalist and anti-globalization protesters will severely disrupt this year’s IMF/World Bank meetings – and some even refuse to discuss the issue on the record because they don’t want to give the protesters the oxygen of publicity.

Sir Edward George, governor of the Bank of England, takes a different view. Yes, he says, many of the protesters deserve to

have their say and no, their presence won’t render the meetings obsolete.

“No. I don’t think they [the meetings] will become less productive. There are a lot of meetings, of course. For me the G7 meeting is the most policy-oriented and, with fewer people, there is a more intensive interchange. Then there is the G10 meeting of finance ministers and governors, which is larger and more formal. I don’t get involved so much in the development committee meetings and actual IMF and World Bank meetings, which are solely prepared public speeches.

“Up until now we’ve been able to convene normally despite the protests.












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