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MEXICO CITY: G20 finance chiefs begin Sunday two days of talks aimed at quelling fears of a global economic downturn amid a persistent eurozone debt crisis and a looming fiscal crunch in the United States. Finance ministers and central bank governors from the Group of 20 top economies will gather in Mexico City as debt-riddled Greece continues to trouble Europe while Spain fights off pressure to seek a bailout.
While Madrid avoids the bailout route, the problems in Greece are still haunting Europe's single currency, more than two years after Athens received its first multi-billion-euro rescue. Greek officials are locked in tough negotiations with European Union and IMF auditors over austerity measures Greece must take in return for a bailout payment it needs to avoid defaulting on its debt.
While the fiscal situation in the United States is also a major concern, officials do not expect any movement on that front until after Tuesday's US presidential election.
The White House and Congress need to find a compromise by the end of the year to avoid a "fiscal cliff" of automatic spending cuts and tax hikes, which experts say could hurt the US economy and curb global growth.
The meeting is a follow-up to a June summit, when G20 leaders vowed to co-ordinate "fiscal actions" to boost domestic demand if economic conditions deteriorated.
Since then, the IMF slashed its 2012 global growth forecast to 3.3 percent, eurozone unemployment rose to a record 11.6 percent in September and growth decelerated in emerging nations.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2012

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