The finance ministers and central bank chiefs of the top 20 advanced and emerging economies will seek in their final communique to show unity on the divisive issue of how to promote growth without harming fiscal situations.
The meeting in Moscow, in an exhibition centre outside the Kremlin walls, aims to set up the G20 heads of state summit in Saint Petersburg in September, the culmination of Russia's presidency of the group.
French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici told reporters that negotiators needed to find a "balanced language" on how to square stimulating growth with reducing deficits.
He said that the final communique would not contain a specific numeric target for reducing public debt and deficits, as was the case at the summit in Toronto in 2010.
"The reduction of deficits is a medium term objective. But at the same time the short term priority is growth, growth, and growth," Moscovici added.
The United States made clear ahead of the meeting that the fight against unemployment should be at the centre of the agenda, with US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew calling on EU states to do more to improve demand and growth.
However some states, in particular Germany, have repeatedly argued over the importance of fiscal prudence and not harming budgets for the sake of stimulus.
The meeting comes amid demands for clarity after the US Federal Reserve said it could begin cutting its quantitative easing programme, which injects some USD 85 billion a month into the economy via bond purchases, later this year and end the programme by mid-2014.
In testimony to Congress the week, the Fed chairman Ben Bernanke stressed that the central bank would only move to taper the programme if the economy appeared strong enough to withstand less support.
Some key nations -- fearing that if the US slows down or shuts down completely the flow of money could hurt their own struggling economies -- called on US policymakers to be as transparent in their communication on the issue as possible.
"Having visibility is key," said Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov.
"We need to establish rules for quantitative easing," he said, saying these regulations should be "transparent and multinational".
"When it happens, it's important that communication is adequate and continues to be adequate," said the Brazilian negotiator at the G20, Carlos Marcio Cozendey.
All G20 governments are acutely aware of the fragility of their recoveries from the global slowdown.
The IMF earlier this month cut its forecast for global growth, projecting the world's economy would grow 3.1 per cent in 2013, down from its April estimate of 3.3 per cent.
China and other emerging economic powers now face new risks, it warned, "including the possibility of a longer growth slowdown."
As growth in emerging markets slows, Siluanov said the G20 was expecting global lender the World Bank to make proposals for a global financing mechanism for investment.
This was necessary "in conditions of ever more limited budgetary sources of financing," he said.
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