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PRIME MINISTER BROWN: The whole of the United Kingdom welcomes
President Obama and the First Lady on your first official
visit to our country.
President Obama, you have given renewed hope not only to the
citizens of the United States of America, but to all citizens in
all part of the world.
And I want to thank you for your leadership, your vision and your
courage, which you've already shown in your presidency, and
congratulate you on the dynamism, the energy and,
indeed, the achievements that you have been responsible for.
Your first 70 days in office have changed America, and you've
changed America's relationship with the world.
So I thank you for coming to our country and I hope you will
enjoy your visit with us.
Today we are renewing our special relationship
for new times.
Ours is not an alliance of convenience; it is a
partnership of purpose.
It's a partnership that at times of challenge is resilient and at
times of change is constant.
President Obama and I are agreed about the significance of this
week's G20 meeting, that the world is coming together to act
in the face of unprecedented global financial times.
Our first duty is to those who are suffering most -- the people
anxious about their mortgages, their jobs and
their family's future.
For them, the pain of recession is all too real.
But let us not forget that in 1929, when the Wall Street crash
happened and led to recession, it was not until 1945 that the
world came together to reshape the world economy.
Then it took more than 15 years.
Today, within months of this financial crisis, we are coming
together to solve the common problems we face, we are
cooperating to shorten the recession, and we are working
together to protect and save jobs.
The truth is that today's global problems require global
solutions.
And at this week's summit, where leaders representing 85 percent
of the world's economy are gathering together, this summit
cannot simply agree to the lowest common denominator.
We must stand united in our determination to do whatever is
necessary.
This is an unprecedented financial crisis.
People have lost their homes, their jobs, and in some cases,
their hope.
And President Obama and I are agreed today that the actions we
take are global solutions required for global problems.
There are really five tests for the G20 summit, five tests for
the world -- tests that if met, will create a new consensus for
the world.
The speed and scale of global economic change has overwhelmed
the national system of rules and regulations.
So our first test is to agree tougher and more transparent
supervision of banks, hedge funds, and what is known as the
global shadow banking system.
We are both agreed there will be no sustainable recovery until
the banks are cleaned up and a new regulatory system
is put in place.
The second test is to commit to taking the action necessary to
bring about a resumption of growth, push back against the
global recession, and support families and businesses.
The third test is to ensure, by international economic
cooperation and by strengthening our international economic
institutions, we support growth in emerging markets and
developing countries.
The fourth test is to reject protectionism and kick-start
global trade, and I suggest that an absolute minimum of $100
billion of trade finance that is so desperately needed.
Fifth, we have an obligation to help the poorest, those most
vulnerable, but least able to respond to the crisis, by
meeting our Millennium Development goals and keeping
our pledges on aid.
Both the United Kingdom and the United States are also embarked
on a transition to becoming low-carbon economies, because
the President and I share the conviction that green energy
technologies will be the major driver of our future economic
growth and we can create millions of green-collar jobs in
the world for the future.
Now, we have some tough negotiations ahead.
It will not be easy.
But I know from my talks this week, and from my discussions
with President Obama today, that the world does want to come
together; that Britain and America working together can
help make this consensus not just something that is agreed on
paper, but which truly delivers for people everywhere who are
worried about their jobs and their hopes and
their family budgets.
Today, we, the G20 leaders, will begin our discussions.
Tomorrow, we must make decisions.
And that is what we will do.
We've also discussed how we rebuild Afghanistan by
complementing our military action with defense, diplomacy,
and development -- putting new resources into civilian support
for the Afghan reconstruction.
The President and I also discussed our hopes that Iran
will make the right choice and take advantage of the
international community's willingness to negotiate, and
how we will renew our efforts to deliver security and peace for
both the Palestinians and Israel.
Mr. President, I'm honored to be working with you so closely.
We share a personal friendship.
I believe we can continue to work together
for the common good.
I repeat: The whole of the United Kingdom is delighted and
privileged that you're with us today.
Thank you.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you so much, Gordon.
Good morning.
I am very pleased to be in London, especially with weather
of the sort we're seeing today.
And I want to thank Prime Minister Brown for hosting us,
for his wife taking Michelle on a tour of some wonderful
projects around the city, for his leadership throughout
this challenge.
I have to say it's not just Gordon and Sarah that have been
very hospitable -- I had a chance to see their two sons and
we talked about dinosaurs a little bit -- (laughter) -- in
between discussions of Afghanistan and Iran.
So we've had a wonderful time.
And you're to be congratulated because you have shown
extraordinary energy and leadership and initiative in
laying the groundwork for this summit.
All of us owe Prime Minister Brown an extraordinary debt of
gratitude for his preparations in what I believe will be a
historic and essential meeting of the G20 nations.
Prime Minister Brown and I had a productive discussion
this morning.
Both of us greatly value the special relationship between
our nations.
The United States and the United Kingdom have stood together
through thick and thin, through war and peace, through hard
times and prosperity -- and we've always emerged stronger by
standing together.
So I'm pleased that my first meeting overseas as President is
with Gordon Brown, just as I was pleased to host him in
Washington shortly after taking office.
And I know that we both believe that the relationship between
our two countries is more than just an alliance of interests;
it's a kinship of ideals and it must be constantly renewed.
In our meeting this morning we covered a complex and
wide-ranging agenda.
It begins, of course, with the global economy.
All of us here in London have the responsibility to act with a
sense of urgency, and I think that what Prime Minister Brown
spoke about, the human dimensions of this crisis --
people losing their homes, losing their businesses that
they've worked so hard for, losing their health care in the
United States; people around the world who were already desperate
before the crisis and they find themselves even more desperate
afterwards -- that's what our agenda has to begin with, and
that's where it will end.
All of us here in London have the responsibility to act with a
sense of urgency, and every nation that will be
participating has been affected by a crisis that has cost us so
much in terms of jobs, savings and the economic security of our
citizens.
So make no mistake, we are facing the most severe economic
crisis since World War II.
And the global economy is now so fundamentally interconnected
that we can only meet this challenge together.
We can't create jobs at home if we're not doing our part to
support strong and stable markets around the world.
The United States is committed, working alongside the United
Kingdom, to doing whatever it takes to stimulate growth and
demand, and to ensure that a crisis like this never
happens again.
At home, we're moving forward aggressively on both recovery
and reform.
We've taken unprecedented action to create jobs and restore the
flow of credit.
And we've proposed a clear set of tough, new 21st-century rules
of the road for all of our financial institutions.
We are lifting ourselves out of this crisis and putting an end
to the abuses that got us here.
I know that the G20 nations are appropriately pursuing their own
approaches, and as Gordon indicated, we're not going to
agree on every point.
I came here to put forward our ideas, but I also came here to
listen, and not to lecture.
Having said that, we must not miss an opportunity to lead.
To confront a crisis that knows no borders, we have a
responsibility to coordinate our actions and to focus on common
ground, not on our occasional differences.
If we do, I believe we can make enormous progress.
And that's why, in preparation for these meetings, I've reached
out and consulted with many of the leaders who are here or will
be arriving shortly.
History shows us that when nations fail to cooperate, when
they turn away from one another, when they turn inward, the price
for our people only grows.
That's how the Great Depression deepened.
That's a mistake that we cannot afford to repeat.
So in the days ahead I believe we will move forward with a
sense of common purpose.
We have to do what's necessary to restore growth and to pursue
the reforms that can stabilize our financial system well into
the future.
We have to reject protectionism and accelerate our efforts to
support emerging markets.
And we have to put in place a structure that can sustain our
cooperation in the months and years ahead.
The Prime Minister and I also covered several other areas of
challenge that are fundamental to our common security and
prosperity.
As he mentioned, we discussed my administration's review of
strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan, a review that
benefitted greatly from the consultations with our allies.
The city of London, like the United States, was attacked by
the al Qaeda terrorists who are still plotting in Pakistan, and
we are committed to a focused effort to defeat them.
And I want to repeat something that I said during our last
visit together -- I want to honor the British troops and
their families who are serving alongside our own on behalf of
our common security.
We also discussed the progress that was made yesterday at The
Hague, where more than 70 nations gathered to discuss our
mutual responsibilities to partner with the Afghan people
so that we can deny al Qaeda a safe haven.
And in the days ahead we'll consult further with our NATO
allies about training Afghan security forces, increasing our
civilian support, and a regional approach that recognizes the
connection between the future of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
And just a few other points.
The Prime Minister and I share a common commitment to sustain
diplomacy on behalf of a secure and lasting peace between Israel
and the Palestinians, and Israel and the Arab world.
And we're working together to responsibly end the war in Iraq
by transitioning to Iraqi responsibility.
We're both committed to diplomacy with Iran that offers
the Islamic republic the opportunity of a better future
if it abandons its nuclear weapons ambitions.
And finally, we discussed two of the other long-term challenges
that will define our times, which I will be focused on
throughout my trip in Europe -- the need for global action to
confront climate change and a renewed effort on behalf of
nuclear nonproliferation, which I will be discussing later today
with President Medvedev.
Our immediate task, however, is the critical work of confronting
the economic crisis.
As I've said, we've passed through an era of profound
irresponsibility; now we cannot afford half-measures, and we
cannot go back to the kind of risk-taking that leads to
bubbles that inevitably bust.
So we have a choice: We can shape our future, or let events
shape it for us.
And if we want to succeed, we can't fall back on the stale
debates and old divides that won't move us forward.
Every single nation who's here has a stake in the other.
We won't solve all our problems in the next few days, but we can
make real and unprecedented progress.
We have an obligation to keep it -- keep working at it until the
burden on ordinary people is lifted, until we've achieved the
kind of steady growth that creates jobs and advances
prosperity for people everywhere.
That's the responsibility we bear; that must be the legacy of
our cooperation.
And I'm extraordinarily grateful to Gordon for his friendship and
his leadership in mobilizing at a time of such significant
moment.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: Thank you very much.
I said to Barack I was going to introduce him to my friends in
the British media.
Nick.
Q Prime Minister, thank you very much, indeed.
Nick Robinson, BBC News.
A question for you both, if I may.
The Prime Minister has repeatedly blamed the United
States of America for causing this crisis.
France and Germany blame both Britain and America for causing
this crisis.
Who is right?
And isn't the debate about that at the heart of the debate about
what to do now?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I would say that if you look at the sources
of this crisis, the United States certainly has some
accounting to do with respect to a regulatory system that was
inadequate to the massive changes that had taken place in
the global financial system.
I think what is also true is that here in Great Britain, in
continental Europe, around the world, we were seeing the same
mismatch between the regulatory regimes that were in place and
the highly integrated global capital markets that had
emerged.
So at this point, I'm less interested in identifying blame
than fixing the problem.
And I think we've taken some very aggressive steps in the
United States to do so -- not just responding to the immediate
crisis, ensuring that banks are adequately capitalized, dealing
with the enormous drop-off in demand and the contraction
that's been taking place, but more importantly for the long
term, making sure that we've got a set of regulations that are up
to the task.
And that includes a number that will be discussed at this
summit.
I think there's a lot of convergence between all the
parties involved about the need, for example, to focus not on the
legal form that a particular financial product takes or the
institution that it emerges from, but rather what's the risk
involved; what's the function of this product and how do we
regulate that adequately; much more effective coordination
between countries so that we can anticipate some of the risks
that are involved; dealing with the problem of derivatives
markets and making sure that we've set up systems that can
reduce some of the risk there.
So I actually think that there's enormous consensus that has
emerged in terms of what we need to do now, and I'm a big
believer in looking forward rather than backwards.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: You know, I was in Brazil last week, and I
think President Lula will forgive me for saying this -- he
said to me, when I was leader of the trade unions, I blamed the
government; when I became leader of the opposition, I blamed the
government; when I became the government,
I blamed Europe and America.
(Laughter.) And he recognizes, as we do, that this is a global
problem.
It's a global problem that requires a global solution.
What essentially happened is that the speed and the pace and
the scope of global financial changes -- the mobility of
capital around the world -- overwhelmed system of national
regulation.
And if we don't accept that as the problem that we've got to
solve, then we will not solve the problems this week.
This is a problem to build cross-border supervision, to
actually deal with the rules globally that can govern the
financial supervision of banks and markets, and to root out the
bad practices that have partly existed because of the scope by
which -- because of the speed by which financial markets moved
and the scope that they had to cross national boundaries.
So we need global solutions to what is a global problem and I
think we will agree a number of measures, as President Obama
said, that will clean up the global financial system.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: And just one last point I want to make,
because it's relevant to this issue of responsibility versus
blame.
I had a professor when I was in law school who said some are to
blame but all are responsible.
And I think that's the best way for us to approach the problem
that we have right now.
I do think that, across borders, there has been a tendency to
believe that whatever the global capital markets were doing was
ultimately beneficial.
I am a big believer in global capital markets and their
potential to provide capital to countries that might not
otherwise be able to grow, the possibilities of increasing
living standards in ways that we have not seen previously in
world history.
But what we have to understand is, is that that's going to
require some sort of regulatory framework to make sure that it
doesn't jump the rails.
And that I think is something that we're going to be able to
put together.
Jennifer Loven of AP.
Where's Jennifer -- there you are.
Q Thank you, Mr. President, Mr. Prime Minister.
Mr. President, you come here with several signs of fairly
broad challenges to American economic leadership.
There's the resistance to big, new stimulus spending; there's
talk of a global -- new global currency; talk of even stricter
regulations than are on the table now.
How do you answer that?
And what do you say to the talk that there's a decline in the
American model, American prominence?
And then to the Prime Minister, if I could.
French President Sarkozy said he might walk out of the summit if
the regulations that are on the table do not get more strict,
say, on offshore tax havens and on risky financial products.
Can you answer that?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, I think if you pulled quotes from 10
years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, from previous news
reports, you might find similar contentions that America was on
decline.
And somehow it hasn't worked out that way, because I think that
there is a vibrancy to our economic model, a durability to
our political model, and a set of ideals that has sustained us
through even the most difficult times.
Now, with respect to the current crisis, I think that there is no
doubt that at a time when the world is fearful, that there is
a strong tendency to look for somebody to blame.
And I think that given our prominence in the world
financial system, it's natural that questions are asked -- some
of them very legitimate -- about how we have participated in
global financial markets.
Having said that, I am absolutely confident that this
meeting will reflect enormous consensus about the need to work
in concert to deal with these problems.
I think that the separation between the various parties
involved has been vastly overstated.
If you look at where there has been the biggest debate, and I
think that the press has fastened on this as a ongoing
narrative -- this whole issue of fiscal stimulus.
And the fact of the matter is, is that almost every country
that's participating in this summit has engaged in fiscal
stimulus.
The ones that are perceived as being resistant to fiscal
stimulus have done significant fiscal stimulus.
There has not been a dispute about the need for government to
act in the face of a rapidly contracting set of markets and
very high unemployment.
Now, there have been differences in terms of how should that
stimulus be shaped.
There have been arguments, for example, among some European
countries that because they have more of a social safety net,
that some of the countercyclical measures that we took -- for
example, unemployment insurance -- were less necessary for them
to take.
But the truth is, is that that's -- that's just arguing at the
margins.
The core notion that government has to take some steps to deal
with a contracting global marketplace and that we should
be promoting growth, that's not in dispute.
On the regulatory side, this notion that somehow there are
those who are pushing for regulation and those who are
resisting regulation is belied by the facts.
Tim Geithner, who's sitting here today, went before Congress and
proposed as aggressive a set of regulatory measures as any that
have emerged among G20 members.
That was before we showed up.
And in conversations that Gordon and I had with our teams, I
think there's great symmetry in our belief that even as we deal
with the current crisis, we've got to make sure that we're
preventing future crises like this from happening again.
On the topic of emerging markets and making sure that they have
the finances that they need to weather the storm, poor
countries are getting help and they're not being lost in the
shuffle, there is complete concurrence.
So I know that when you've got a bunch of heads of state talking,
it's not visually that interesting -- (laughter) -- and
it -- you know, the communiqués are written in sort of dry
language, and so there's a great desire to inject some conflict
and some drama into the occasion.
But the truth of the matter is, is that I think there has been
an extraordinary convergence and I'm absolutely confident that
the United States, as -- as a peer of these other countries,
will help to lead us through this very difficult time.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: Let me also add that I'm confident that
President Sarkozy will not only be here for the first course of
our dinner, but will still be sitting as we complete our
dinner this evening.
And I think, as President Obama has said, look, never before has
the world come together in this way to deal with an economic
crisis.
Any of the crises that we've seen since the second world war,
you have not had this level of international cooperation.
And never before have the world come together with so many
countries represented from so many different continents to
address this crisis.
So we have China, we have India, we have Argentina, Brazil, we
have South Africa, we have Russia, as well as Europe and
America and Japan.
And we are within a few hours I think of agreeing a global plan
for economic recovery and reform.
And I think the significance of this is that we're looking at
every aspect.
It is American leadership on reshaping the financial system,
on recapitalizing the banks, on restructuring the banking system
that will inform our discussions on the future of the financial
system.
So I praise President Obama for the work that has been done
within only a few days of coming into office.
But we will also be discussing how we can help the emerging
markets and the industrializing countries, how they can be
protected against the financial storm that is facing them.
We will not forget that we have obligations to the poorest
countries in the world, as well.
And so the significance of this is not just that everybody is
coming together, but in all those different dimensions of
the economic activity of the world, how we can restructure
the financial system, how we can get growth back and create jobs
in the world, how we can rebuild our financial institutions for
the future, how we can help the poorest countries of the world,
how we can move forward on low-carbon recovery -- you're
going to see action.
And of course it's difficult, of course it's complex -- you have
a large number of countries.
But I'm very confident that people not only want to work
together, but we agree a common global plan for recovery and
reform.
Tom.
Q Tom Bradby, ITV News.
Mr. President, I hear what you say, but you've committed a vast
sum of your country's money to a huge fiscal stimulus and we had
the clear impression that you wanted other countries to come
in behind you a bit more strongly.
It appears that -- we've been told by the Governor of the Bank
of England we can't do more for the moment, and the French and
the Germans won't.
Are you disappointed by that?
And are you actually still calling on other countries to go
further?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, as I said before, I think that there is
broad recognition that in the midst of the worst crisis we've
seen since the '30s, that governments are going to have to
act.
And certainly the United States does not intend to act alone --
and we're not.
Great Britain has taken serious steps.
The European Union has taken serious steps.
Australia, Canada, Japan, China have all initiated significant
stimulus packages.
And I think that our goal is simply to make certain that each
country, taking into account its differences in economic
circumstances, as well as political culture, is doing what
is necessary to promote economic growth.
The United States will do its share, but I think that one of
the things that Gordon and I spoke about is the fact that in
some ways the world has become accustomed to the United States
being a voracious consumer market and the engine that
drives a lot of economic growth worldwide.
And I think that in the wake of this crisis, even as we're doing
stimulus we have to take into account our own deficits.
We're going to have to take into account a whole host of factors
that can increase our savings rate and start dealing with our
long-term fiscal position, as well as our current account
deficits.
Those are all issues that we have to deal with internally,
which means that if there's going to be renewed growth, it
can't just be the United States as the engine.
Everybody is going to have to pick up the pace.
And I think that there's a recognition, based on the
conversations that I've had with leaders around the world, that
that is important.
I should add, by the way, that to the extent that all countries
are participating in promoting growth, that also strengthens
the arguments that we can make in our respective countries
about the importance of world trade -- the sense that this
isn't a situation where each country is only exporting and
never importing, but rather that there's a balance in how we
approach these issues.
And, again, I've actually been pleased with the degree to which
there's common agreement on that front.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: Tom, if you were asking this question in
a situation where America had done a fiscal stimulus and no
one other country except Britain had followed it, then your
question would have some legitimacy.
But, look, what has happened around the world in the last few
months is country after country have contributed to the biggest
fiscal stimulus, the biggest injection of resources, the
biggest amount of new investment provided by governments into the
world economy in the history of the world.
And we are in the midst of the biggest fiscal boost that the
world economy has ever had.
And so Germany has invested $80 billion; France invested $25
billion; we've invested; other countries in the European have
invested.
Different countries have their different times for announcing
their decisions.
Some will do it in their budget, some will do it be financial
statement.
The combination of all of this, as you will see when you get our
communiqué tomorrow, is the most substantial fiscal stimulus,
something on the order of $2 trillion -- indeed, more than
that.
And that is the world coming together to cut interest rates,
the world coming together to give a boost to the economy, and
of course, the world coming together to deal with the other
problem, which is restructuring our financial systems for the
future.
And I think it is remarkable that things that people could
not have thought possible 10 years ago, even 5 years ago,
that you have this coordinated action from all the countries.
It is remarkable this is happening.
Of course, we want to push it forward tomorrow, and I believe
we will.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Where's Caren?
There you are.
Hi, Caren.
Q Thank you, Mr. President, Prime Minister.
You mentioned that you will be meeting later with Russian
President Medvedev.
What are your aims for that meeting?
And could you elaborate on this idea of resetting U.S.-Russian
relations?
And also, does that mean, as Russia hopes, that you're
willing to give ground on issues like missile defense and NATO
expansion?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, this will be the first time that I'm
meeting with President Medvedev.
I'm very much looking forward to the meeting.
We've had a series of conversations on the telephone
and exchanged letters.
As I spoke about during the campaign, as Secretary of State
Clinton has amplified in some of her remarks and her meetings
with top Russian officials, what we've seen over the last several
years is drift in the U.S.-Russian relationship.
There are very real differences between the United States and
Russia, and I have no interest in papering those over.
But there are also a broad set of common interests that we can
pursue.
Both countries, I believe, have an interest in reducing nuclear
stockpiles and promoting nuclear nonproliferation.
Both countries have an interest in reducing the threat of
terrorism.
Both countries have an interest in stabilizing the world
economy.
Both countries have an interest in finding a sustainable path
for energy and dealing with some of the threats of climate change
that we've discussed.
So, on a whole range of issues, from Afghanistan to Iran to the
topics that will be consuming most of our time here at the
G20, I think there's great potential for concerted action.
And that's what we will be pursuing.
Now, as has I think been noted in the press, a good place to
start is the issue of nuclear proliferation.
And one of the things that I've always believed strongly is that
both the United States and Russia and other nuclear powers
will be in a much stronger position to strengthen what has
become a somewhat fragile, threadbare nonproliferation
treaty if we are leading by example and if we can take
serious steps to reduce the nuclear arsenal.
I think people on both sides of the Atlantic understand that as
much as the constant cloud, the threat of nuclear warfare has
receded since the Cold War, that the presence of these deadly
weapons, their proliferation, the possibility of them finding
their way into the hands of terrorists, continues to be the
gravest threat to humanity.
What better project to start off than seeing if we can make
progress on that front.
I think we can.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: Adam.
Q Both of you today have conjured the alarming specter of
the Great Depression, but let's take your most optimistic hopes
for this summit.
Assuming you're successful, I suspect what millions of people
around the world want to know is how much worse is this going to
get and how long is it going to last and when is it going to end
and growth return.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: It will get worse if people do not act.
The option of doing nothing is not available to us.
And I think we've seen from past crises, both internationally and
in regions of the world, that if people fail to take the decisive
action at the beginning, then you risk a longer recession; you
risk more businesses being lost, you risk more jobs lost.
So, of course, these are difficult decisions because
governments are moving in where markets have failed and banks
have collapsed.
But to take these decisions is the right course for the world
economy.
Now, I believe that the degree of international cooperation
that we can get will determine how quickly all our economies
can recover.
If there is stimulus in one country and it's repeated in
another country, and repeated in other countries, then you can
magnify the effect of that stimulus round the world, both
for the benefit of the individual country that's making
it and for the rest of the world.
And if you can see the coordinated cuts in interest
rates coming together, then you've got to push for recovery
and for new economic activity.
And if you can see the banks, which operate internationally,
being cleaned up in every country, then you have a
situation where the world will feel confident and there will be
trust in the banking system for people to resume saving,
investing, and preparing for the future.
So I believe the level of international cooperation will
be one of the major factors that will determine how quickly we
can recover.
But what we are determined to do is, in this difficult time,
protect people in their jobs, make sure that we can get money
to mortgage holders and to businesses, and of course make
sure that countries that are in peril at the moment, who don't
have their own resources and aren't able to restructure their
banking systems, are given resources from the world to
enable them to do so.
So the way forward is not to do nothing.
The way forward is to take the action that's necessary.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I agree with everything that Gordon said.
It's been said repeatedly that every financial crisis comes to
an end.
So it will come to an end at some point.
The question is, what have been the costs and how long the
downturn.
I think people should take heart from the fact that governments
have learned lessons from the '30s, central banks have learned
lessons from the '30s.
There has been much swifter action, much bolder action, much
more coordinated action even prior to this summit than we
have seen in previous financial crises.
And that means that the prospect of restoring world growth and
trade are that much greater.
I do think that Gordon is absolutely right -- how well we
execute it in the months to come, how well we button down
these regulations, how well we each in our own respective
countries help banks to deal with the impaired assets that
they have on their books so that they can start lending again to
businesses and consumers, how effective we are in managing the
huge outflows of capital from emerging markets and provide a
buffer for very poor and developing countries that are
seeing huge contractions in their trade and just don't have
a lot of margin for error, how well we reform our international
financial institutions so that they can be a more effective
player in this whole process -- all those things will help
determine whether this ends up being a slow-rolling crisis that
takes a lot more time to cure, or whether we start seeing
significant recovery.
I don't think there's any doubt that 2009 is going to be
difficult, and, again, when you put a human face on this crisis,
the way people experience it most immediately is losing their
job, losing their home, losing their savings, losing their
pensions.
And what I think each of us is committed to doing is to make
sure that people are getting immediate help, even as we're
solving these broader structural problems, because we don't want
that kind of suffering, but it's also not good for the overall
health of the economic system.
And that's part of where stimulus has been very helpful.
I mean, in our country, the unemployment insurance, the food
stamps, the other mechanisms that have put money directly
into people's pockets, that's not just good for those
individual families; it's also helped to lift consumer
spending, or at least stabilize consumer spending in a way that
will promise better growth in the future.
Hans Nichols.
Q Thank you, Mr. President, Mr. Prime Minister.
Mr. President, you just spoke about looking forward and not
backward, and you also referenced the voracious
appetite of the American consumer.
What role should the European and American consumer then play
in the quarter that starts today?
Should they be spending or saving to alter the velocity of
what you just called a slow-rolling crisis?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, I think that each family has got to look
at its circumstances and make those determinations.
Obviously, there are a lot of people who are concerned about
their job security, or they're concerned about seeing their
savings having diminished if they were in the stock market,
and I think it's an understandable response to be
somewhat cautious in the midst of this kind of uncertainty.
I think the best advice I would have would be to say that
despite the current hardships, we are going to get through
this, and so you should plan sensibly, in anticipation that
this economy is going to recover and new -- young families are
going to want to buy new homes, and sooner or later that clunker
of a car is going to wear out and people are going to want to
buy a new car.
And so that basing decisions around fear is -- is not the
right way to go.
We are going to get through this difficult time.
And I think it is sometimes important to step back and just
have some perspective about the differences between now and the
Great Depression, when there were no social safety nets in
place; when unemployment was 25 or 30 percent.
This is a difficult time, but it's not what happened to our
grandparents' generation.
And so I would ask people to be confident about their own
futures.
And that may mean, in some cases, spending now as
investments for the future.
There's been a debate back home about our budget: In the midst
of this crisis, should we deal with health care?
Should we deal with energy?
Should we deal with education?
And one of the analogies I've used is a family who is having a
difficult time -- and I actually get letters like this
occasionally from voters -- one of our parents has lost their
job, savings have declined, and so I'm wrestling with whether or
not I should go to college because that will require me
taking out a lot of debt, and maybe it would be more
responsible for me to go find any job that I can to help the
family.
And, you know, when I write back to those families or those
individuals I say, well, you've obviously got to make these
decisions yourself, but don't shortchange the future because
of fear in the present.
That I think is the most important message that we can
send not just in the United States but around the world.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: Barack is absolutely right.
Surely the most important thing is that people, by the decisions
that are made, can have confidence in the future --
confidence to be able to make decisions about whether to save
or to spend.
And all the measures that we are taking -- restructuring the
banks, putting money into the economy, the public works, and
of course the low-carbon activities that we're
encouraging as well -- are designed to give people the
confidence that their savings are safe, that we've sorted out
the problems and are sorting out the problems in the banking
system, that we have put resources into economic activity
in the economy so that jobs can be solved and jobs can be
created.
And then people, as consumers, can make their own decisions
about what they want to do.
And I think that's the key to the future, that people can see
that the problems are being addressed and they, themselves,
can have the confidence either to save or to spend or to invest
-- have confidence in the future.
And I believe that we can make a big step towards creating that
confidence by some of the decisions that we can make
together.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: All right?
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: George.
Fine.
Q Thank you.
George Pascoe-Watson from The Sun.
Mr. President, as President you won with a landslide.
Have you got any advice for Gordon Brown, the Prime
Minister?
(Laughter.) Secondly, what are your things you like most about
Great Britain and London?
And lastly, England are playing in a World Cup qualifying match
in soccer, a game you love.
Have you got any good -- good luck message for the England
team tonight?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well -- (laughter) -- let me take all
these in turn.
I have had enough trouble back home picking my brackets for the
college basketball tournament that's taking place there --
called March Madness -- stirred up all kinds of controversy.
The last thing I'm going to do is wade into European football.
(Laughter.) That would be a mistake.
I didn't get a briefing on that, but I sense that would be a
mistake.
(Laughter.) PRIME MINISTER BROWN: England will win I can
tell you.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: So that would be point number one.
The thing I love about Great Britain is its people, and there
is just a extraordinary affinity and kinship that we have.
We owe so much to England; that when you come here there's that
sense of familiarity, as well as difference, that makes it just a
special place.
I have -- the only advice I would give Gordon Brown is the
same advice that I gave myself during the campaign and that
I've been giving myself over the last three months, which is over
time good policy is good politics.
And if every day you are waking up and you are making the very
best decisions that you can, despite the fact that sometimes
the cards in your hand aren't very good and the options are
narrow and the choices are tough, and you are assured to be
second-guessed constantly, and that occasionally you're going
to make mistakes -- but if every day you're waking up saying, how
can I make the best possible decisions to create jobs, help
young people imagine a better future, provide care to the sick
or the elderly or the vulnerable, sustain the planet
-- if those are the questions that you're asking yourself,
then I think you end up doing pretty good.
And the best part is you can wake up and look at yourself in
the mirror.
And that I think is the kind of integrity that Gordon Brown has
shown in the past and will continue to show in the future.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: It's been an extraordinary visit already
and I've benefitted from Barack's advice not just about
elections, but about fitness -- we've been talking about not the
-- (laughter) -- not the treadmill of politics, but the
treadmill that we're both on every day, the running machines,
and how you can manage to do that when you're traveling
around the world and going to different countries, and we've
been exchanging ideas.
Can I also say it's an extraordinary privilege to have
Secretary of State Clinton here and Secretary of State Geithner
and we wish them well in everything that they do as well.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: And we thank the entire team.
As I said, everybody has worked extraordinarily hard to make
this successful.
We are very grateful for the hospitality.
There's one last thing that I should mention that I love about
Great Britain, and that is the Queen.
And so I'm very much looking forward to -- (laughter) -- I'm
very much looking forward to meeting her for the first time
later this evening.
And as you might imagine, Michelle has been really
thinking that through -- (laughter) -- because I think in
the imagination of people throughout America, I think what
the Queen stands for and her decency and her civility, what
she represents, that's very important.
PRIME MINISTER BROWN: Well, I know the Queen is looking
forward to welcoming you and she's very much looking forward
to her discussion with you.
So, thank you very much.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you.