Barack Obama urges global co-operation to secure growth
The global financial system and world economy are set to dominate the agenda at a two-day meeting of the G20 group of nations in South Korea.
But there are fears the summit in Seoul could descend into a row between the US and China about so-called "currency wars" and trade imbalances.
Ahead of the meeting US President Barack Obama urged leaders to work together for global economic recovery.
He said the US would seek to create jobs and reduce global imbalances.
On a visit to a US base in Seoul before the main G20 meetings began, Mr Obama took the opportunity to urge North Korea to engage with the international community.
"North Korea's continued pursuit of nuclear weapons will only lead to more isolation and less security," he said. "But there is another path available to North Korea."
Domestic demandWashington has blamed global economic imbalances in part on Beijing's alleged manipulation of its currency to help boost Chinese exports, which has led to Beijing amassing huge foreign reserves.
Others, however, say America's economic policies, specifically creating new money to pursue quantitative easing (QE), could also be a form of currency manipulation for its own ends.
Speaking to the BBC, the president of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, said there were "definitely tensions" over currency.
"One has to be wary of the tensions because you don't want them to slip into protectionism," he said.
But he said that while the US raising the issue over China was "useful", he added China's next five-year plan for its economic development would focus on increasing domestic demand, adding this would be important in shifting China's growth.
CriticsAt a G20 press conference, Brazil's Finance Minister Guido Mantega criticised the US central bank's latest QE programme.
"The trouble with putting an extra $600bn into the US economy is that this money will not go into production, will not create jobs and neither will it boost domestic consumption.
"With more money in the market, investors will take advantage of higher interest rates in other places, put the money into these countries' stock exchanges or invest in commodities, raising the prices and causing inflation in our countries," Mr Mantega said.
Accused of forcing the dollar down to trade its way back to prosperity, Mr Obama is expected to hold one-on-one talks with two of the strongest critics of his administration's economic direction - Chinese President Hu Jintao and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
President Obama has said that the US alone could not restore growth but accepted the US must change, adding: "When all nations do their part... we all benefit from higher growth."
However, he defended America's "decisive action to halt the fall in activity caused by the deepest crisis we have experienced in generations".
And he again called on countries not to rely on exports to pull them out of their economic problems.
"We all now recognize that the foundation for a strong and durable recovery will not materialize if American households stop saving and go back to spending based on borrowing.
"Yet, no one country can achieve our joint objective of a strong, sustainable, and balanced recovery on its own.
"Just as the United States must change, so too must those economies that have previously relied on exports to offset weaknesses in their down demand," Mr Obama said.
Currency concernsBritain's Prime Minister David Cameron also warned that China should act to correct its trade imbalance.
It is feared that other countries will rush to allow currency devaluation to also make their exports more competitive.
But China considers the exchange rate of its currency to be an internal matter and has only agreed to only gradually let the yuan appreciate.
The governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, has urged the G20 to agree to let current account imbalances unwind, rather than impose targets and policy instruments that could be damaging to all.
BBC
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