G20
- In full:
- Group of 20
- Date:
- December 15, 1999 - present
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G20, international body created in 1999 that provides a forum for strategic economic communication between industrialized and developing countries. The G20 originated as a response to the economic crises of the late 1990s; it expanded on the work of the Group of Seven (G7; known as the Group of Eight [G8] in its political incarnation) by including countries that previously had been left out of the global discussion.
The G20 currently has 21 members: 19 countries and 2 regional organizations. The members are:
The countries are represented in the G20 by their leaders, finance ministers, and central bank governors. The European Union is represented by the leaders of the European Commission and the European Council as well as the head of the European Central Bank. The African Union is represented by its chairperson and by the head of the African Central Bank (upon its establishment). The World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and other international organizations also act in partnership with the G20.
Prior to the first G20 meeting, on December 15–16, 1999, similar conferences with 22 and 33 participants were held in 1998–99 with the goal of making the global economy less vulnerable to crisis. The positive effects of these dialogues drove the official development of the G20. Meetings are held annually, and each summit meeting is hosted and chaired by a different member. In addition, emergency summit meetings may be called; the body convened in November 2008 to address the dire market circumstances of that time. Held immediately after the 2015 Paris terrorist attacks, the previously scheduled G20 summit in Turkey was largely devoted to discussions of terrorism and the ongoing European refugee crisis.
Other issues that have been addressed by the group include corruption, tax transparency, economic inequality, renewable energy, and sustainable development.