Australia took over the chairmanship of the group that brings together the world's top economies yesterday and stages the annual summit in Brisbane next November.
"I am determined the G20 won't be a talkfest," Abbott wrote in The Australian newspaper. "It must be practical and focused.
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The straight-talking prime minister pointed out that Australia, the 12th largest economy in the world, "is currently in its 22nd consecutive year of growth".
Abbott outlined his government's effort to fast-track free trade agreements with South Korea, Japan, China, Indonesia and India to help spur growth.
"A stronger world economy means more jobs, more confidence and more tax revenue that can be used to pay down debt," he said.
"This is what we must work towards. The G20 demonstrated its dynamism and strength during the GFC (global financial crisis). The challenge is to be relevant when there is no immediate crisis to deal with."
He said one area of focus would be infrastructure.
"The world needs more infrastructure investment because building infrastructure drives growth and makes economies more productive in the longer term," he said.
"We need to encourage greater private-sector involvement and help capital markets better channel global savings to productive investments."
In the run-up to the G20 summit, Australia hosts meetings of the forum's finance ministers and central bank chiefs in Sydney in February and in Cairns in September.
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