Japanese Premier Taro Aso, chair of the Group of Eight rich nations, said today he would call an emergency G8 summit if finance chiefs meeting in Washington do not reach a deal on the global credit crisis. "If things cannot be concluded, as the chair we will call one," Aso told reporters.
Japan is the chair this year of the G8, which includes Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States. The G8 leaders held their regular annual summit in northern Japan in July.
Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the G7, the G8 club minus Russia, are due to meet in Washington later today as stock markets around the world plunge in the worst banking crisis since the Great Depression. The G7 meeting in Washington will also include a wider G20 meeting that includes financial leaders of other major economies including Russia, China and India.
"Japan has the precious experience of having overcome a financial crisis," Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo Kawamura told reporters, referring to the collapse of Tokyo's financial system in the late 1990s.
"Our prime minister has the strong intention to take the lead in eliminating fears over the present financial crisis," said Kawamura, the government's spokesman. "But we have yet to get to the stage to offer details."
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi yesterday said that US President George W Bush had sounded him out about a G8 summit on Tuesday.
The White House denied a summit would take place Tuesday but said Bush was open to the idea of leaders meeting. Berlusconi is scheduled to visit Washington next week.