Yahoo –
AFP, Jeremy Tordjman, December 19, 2015
China, India and Russia will soon speak with a louder voice at the International Monetary Fund.
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| The US Congress approved long-stalled reforms of the International Monetary Fund that will give greater voice to emerging-market powers (AFP Photo/Mandel Ngan) |
China, India and Russia will soon speak with a louder voice at the International Monetary Fund.
After years
of opposition, the US Congress has dismantled the final barrier to reforms that
will give the emerging-market powers more say in the affairs of the 188-nation
global crisis lender.
The IMF
reforms are part of a $1.1 trillion spending package approved by Congress on
Friday, and signed into law by President Barack Obama.
Adopted in
2010 by the international community, the reforms were expected to take effect
in 2012.
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MF Managing
Director Christine Lagarde
has been pushing hard for changes in the
voting
rights of members to preserve the
credibility of the Fund (AFP Photo/Mandel
Ngan)
|
The blockage
has been a sore point between President Barack Obama's Democratic
administration and the opposition Republicans who control Congress.
Republicans
had rejected the slightest favorable gesture toward the multinational
organization, the object of some criticism in Washington for its largesse
toward Greece.
In recent
years, international summits have unfailingly included a pointed reminder about
the stalled reform process -- seen as all the more frustrating since the United
States was among the first countries to call for an IMF overhaul in 2010 amid
the global financial crisis.
At the end
of their last summit in mid-November in Turkey, the Group of 20 economic powers
said in a statement that they "remain deeply disappointed" with the
delay in reforms and "we urge the United States to ratify these reforms as
soon as possible."
The long
stall also led the so-called BRICS -- Brazil, Russia, India, China and South
Africa -- to set up an economic alternative, launching in July 2014 their own
monetary fund and development bank.
The US
approval will likely ease their frustrations with the 70-year-old IMF,
dominated by the US, Europe and Japan, as well as remove a major headache for
the Obama administration.
"The
IMF reforms reinforce the central leadership role of the United States in the
global economic system and demonstrate our commitment to maintaining that
position," US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said in a statement.
IMF
credibility on line
The
reforms, however, are crucial for the IMF itself. They double the crisis
lender's permanent financial resources, known as quotas, to some $660 billion.
The green
light by Congress thus paves the way for the IMF to abandon some makeshift
mechanisms it had adopted to keep its finances afloat and finance rescues of
members in crisis.
But above
all it allows the Washington-based institution, founded in 1945, to better
reflect the current interconnectedness of the world economy, exposed in stark
relief during the 2008-2009 global crisis.
The
measures slightly reshuffle the IMF executive board by reducing the
representation of advanced economies, particularly in Europe, to give a greater
voice to dynamic emerging powers.
Currently
China, the world's second-largest economy, has less than 4.0 percent of voting
rights at the IMF, only slightly less than Italy whose economy is five times
smaller.
After the
reforms are implemented, China will see its voting rights nearly double to over
6.0 percent, the largest gain. For example, India's weight will rise from 2.3
percent to 2.6 percent.
The US
action also hands a personal victory to the managing director of the IMF,
Christine Lagarde, who has been pushing hard for the changes to preserve the
credibility of the Fund.
Lagarde
once joked she would "do belly-dancing" if needed to get US
ratification.
"The
United States Congress approval of these reforms is a welcome and crucial step
forward that will strengthen the IMF in its role of supporting global financial
stability," Lagarde said.
Still, the
reforms will not resolve all the representation problems at the IMF. With 16.5
percent of voting rights, the United States remains the largest stakeholder and
continues to hold veto power.
"The
IMF reforms remove a stain on the institution's legitimacy," Eswar Prasad,
a former IMF official, told AFP.
"However,
the scars caused by the protracted delay in having these reforms ratified and
put into operation will not be easily erased."


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