have a look at the asian economies in light of that g 20 meeting and bring in our next guest, sanjay mathurhe is a chief asia economist at rbs. thanks for coming on. this provide for some of the countries in this part of the world, the developing world? >> i think, not very much. first of all, we like the communique, that that they are talking about unwinding the stimulus and trying to put growth back on the agenda. that is a good sign. in reality, would you have seen is the introduction of the kiwi, the decision to withdraw, all this has really been driven by one singular issue which is the health of the u.s. economy. i am not convinced that this is something that can actually really come through at this point in time. that said, i think there is a couple of things we need to keep in mind. the first is that most of asia is now out of the woods. if you look at the last indonesian current account numbers or india's current account numbers, the kind of imbalance that existed last year is now behind us. what we need to look for is u.s. growth. we need that. if we catch that tailwind, i think w