A global growth plan put forward by Australia at last year's Group of 20 leaders summit in Brisbane has survived and will be the key economic focus of this weekend's G20 summit in Turkey.
But many of the policies Australia promised as part if its contribution to boosting growth have disappeared along with those who proposed them - Tony Abbott and Joe Hockey.
In what will be his first international summit, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will attend the three-day G20 in Antalya, Turkey, starting on Saturday. He arrives in Turkey after whistlestop working visits to Jakarta and Berlin. 
As well as the economy, the G20 is expected to be overshadowed by the crisis in neighbouring Syria and Russia's behaviour there.
"Nobody should expect that we will solve the Syrian issue at the G20 meeting," Turkish presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said.
"The G20's main agenda is the global economy. But it is not possible to think in terms of economic development as distinct from political issues. Inevitably, there are also significant political topics to be discussed at the G20 summit," he said.
The G20 agenda lists growth, resilience and sustainability as the economic themes. In Brisbane a year ago, Mr Abbott and Mr Hockey succeeded in having the G20 nations refine an unwieldy and cluttered agenda, and to agree collectively to grow their economies by more than 2 per cent over five years. Between them, the nations made about 1000 commitments which, if fully implemented, would add an estimated $US2 trillion ($2.8 trillion) to global growth.
Australia's contribution included sealing free-trade agreements, asset recycling, cutting red tape, restoring employee share schemes, last year's innovation strategy, which is about to be revamped, and a commitment to return the budget to a strong surplus by 2023-34, all of which are under way or have been delivered.
But other commitments to the growth strategy have been dumped, shelved or remain blocked in the Senate. These include an across-the-board company tax cut of 1.5 percentage points, denying the young unemployed the dole for six months, deregulating university fees, Mr Abbott's paid parental leave scheme, restoring the powers of the Australian Building and Construction Commission, and cutting family tax benefits to fund a revamped childcare scheme.

Focus is boosting infrastructure investment
"A mechanism was established to put forward these reforms. Its details will be discussed comprehensively at the summit by world leaders," Mr Kalin said of the continuation of the Hockey/Abbott growth agenda.
With growth still sluggish and fragile following the global financial crisis, the G20 leaders will focus on boosting infrastructure investment and trade.
Foreign policy expert Professor Michael Wesley said "there was a nice sense of continuity from our agenda last year".
"It's all about the global growth, which hasn't recovered since the GFC."
Apart from a quick trip to New Zealand, this will be Mr Turnbull's first trip abroad as Prime Minister. In Jakarta, he will meet President Joko Widodo to start patching up the volatile relationship that went south due to Indonesian President's decision to execute two Australian drug smugglers Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan.
One senior source said President Widodo had scant interest in foreign affairs so Mr Turnbull would focus on strengthening business ties.
In Berlin, Mr Turnbull and Chancellor Angela Merkel will release a study by the Germany Australia Advisory Group that recommends how to further economic ties between the two countries.