Global Money Talks: Can the G7 Fix What’s Broken?
Paris, FranceMon May 18 2026
Leaders from seven major economies meet in Paris this week to talk about why global money isn’t flowing fairly. The two-day chat starts after a flashy meeting between the U. S. and China wrapped up with more handshakes than real deals. Trade fights and raw material grabber are still stealing the show, making big players wonder if their teamwork is cracking.
Underneath the smiley headlines, France’s top money chief calls out a big puzzle: some countries buy too much, others save too little, and Europe isn’t building the future fast enough. At the same talks, Asia’s finance brains worry about shaky chains of money that could jolt banks any day. Japan, especially, is sweating over bonds wobbling like a house of cards.
Europe wants to calm down prices and keep oil tankers moving safely past Iran’s doorstep. Britain’s new finance face plans to push less stuffy trade rules with its old EU mates. But Washington shows zero sign of saying “our habits helped cause the mess, ” and others aren’t quick to grab blame either.
Away from the blame game, seven countries swap stories about minerals that make phones, cars and jets run. China practically owns the mines for these secret rocks, so the club dreams up ways to share supplies and maybe slap prices on foreign rocks to keep their own mines alive.
Yet even the smartest money minds admit the plan is still in its baby shoes. Inside the U. S. itself, half the team can’t agree on how to sell the idea to others, so don’t expect fireworks within days.