Jakarta Globe – AFP, Jan 29, 2015
Washington. The International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday it would begin working on alternatives to its stalled, five-year-old reform program after passing another year without the required ratification by the US government.
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International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde. (Reuters
Photo/Gary Cameron)
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Washington. The International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday it would begin working on alternatives to its stalled, five-year-old reform program after passing another year without the required ratification by the US government.
In a
proposal mapped out by the IMF executive board, the global crisis lender will
take six months to see what can be salvaged from the 2010 reforms, originally
backed by Washington, the IMF’s largest shareholder, but now blocked in the US
Congress.
The IMF did
not say what the so-called “Plan B” could entail. And it appeared hopeful that
the 2010 package, which doubled IMF funding and increased in a small way the
voting power of emerging economies like China, could be completed.
But the 24
member executive board said in a statement to the broader board of governors of
the Fund that it “deeply regrets” that the 2010 reforms remain blocked.
The board
added that this has caused it to miss deadlines in work on a subsequent, more
sweeping quota review.
The
executive board proposed taking until June 30 to come up with new measures
“that represent meaningful progress towards 2010 reforms’ objectives.”
The United
States, as one of the key founders of the IMF and the world’s largest economy,
controls 16.7 percent of voting rights in the Fund.
That gives
it an effective veto over any major initiative, as reforms require 85 percent
of total voting power to pass.
The Obama
administration has repeatedly pressed Congress to pass the reforms, which were
adopted by the IMF as it sought more funding when Europe began to plunge into
financial crisis and the Fund joined the rescues of Greece, Ireland, and
Portugal.
But
Republican conservatives have blocked any endorsement of the reforms, and since
they captured full control of the US legislature in November’s elections,
prospects for ratification have worsened.
The
executive board stressed in a statement Wednesday that it does not see the
alternative measures of Plan B as any replacement for the plan decided five
years ago.
“The
proposed resolution stresses that such interim steps should not in any way be
seen as a substitute for the 2010 reforms, which remain the highest priority,”
it said.
But it also
gave no hint as to how it hoped the 2010 package would be implemented.
Agence France-Presse

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