Seoul National University. Graduate School of International StudiesCarleton University. Norman Paterson School of International AffairsSciences Po Paris2012-04-192012-04-192010http://hdl.handle.net/10625/48812The report includes seminar papers detailing aspects of economic growth in G20 countries after the 2008 crash. Global growth increased in 2010 to an average of 4.6 percent. By IMF estimates China and India are leading the world at 9-10 percent growth rates, followed by the United States which rebounded to 3.25 percent, Japan to 2.5 percent with the euro area lagging at 1 percent. The Toronto summit formalized medium fiscal consolidation strategies, G20 countries’ immediate challenge. The Seoul summit should shift to deliverables on the medium-term imperative of more balanced global growth.1 digital file (147 p. : ill.)application/pdfenG20ECONOMIC GROWTHINTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONSFINANCIAL REGULATIONTRADEMACROECONOMICSFISCAL POLICYGLOBALIZATIONECONOMIC COOPERATIONINTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUNDBANKINGINTERNATIONAL MONETARY RELATIONSECONOMIC CRISISKOREACANADAFRANCEGLOBALKorea-Canada-France : G20 Seminar, 17-18 September, 2010, Lotte Hotel Seoul, Republic of KoreaWorkshop Report