The world's most powerful economies have a patchy record in delivering anything meaningful from their annual meetings but Abbott, as 2014 host, said he wanted that to change in Brisbane.
"Collectively, there is much work to do," he said in an opinion piece for the Australian Financial Review, ahead of the economic summit that includes the likes of US President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping.
"The global economy remains weak. There's a shortfall in available funds for infrastructure, a lack of employment opportunities globally and trade growth that remains disappointing.
G20 finance ministers agreed in meetings this year to work towards raising the level of their combined economic output by at least two percent above the currently projected level in the next five years, relying heavily on the private sector to deliver growth and jobs.
Each country is expected to submit its detailed plans to achieve this in Brisbane.
While signing off on this is the key outcome that Abbott expects at the weekend, he said an equally important aspect of Australia's rotating presidency was encouraging better accountability by those in charge over the decisions they make.
"Australia, as G20 president this year, has worked hard to ensure that accountability -- to fellow G20 members and to the peoples we serve -- is central to our work.
"There'll be no hiding behind lofty words and motherhood statements in Brisbane. Each nation's domestic growth strategy will have been peer reviewed and the strategies will be published for the world to see."
Together, it will be known as the Brisbane Action Plan.
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