IMF policy-steering body aims at balanced, job-rich global economy
With the global economy strengthening, the International Monetary and
Financial Committee (IMFC) stressed that countries should shift their
focus from the short term to the medium term, with special emphasis on
structural reforms that will support sustainable, balanced, and job-rich
growth.

The IMF focuses on balanced and job-rich economic growth.
Courtesy: Internet |
"We need a new balance in policies that meets the needs of a new
phase of the economic recovery globally," said Singapore Finance
Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, who chaired the twenty-ninth meeting of
the IMFC.
"This doesn't mean a sudden withdrawal of macroeconomic policies -
especially monetary policies - that support the recovery. But it does
mean much greater focus on structural reforms," Tharman said.
Tharman highlighted a few key areas that merit greater attention,
according to the IMFC.
In addition to the need for structural reforms - such as repairing
balance sheets, strengthening banking systems, and improving the
functioning of labour markets - he cited a few key risks to the global
economy. Risks to financial stability -not only legacy risks but also
new ones - were of particular concern, such as an increase in corporate
debt in some countries that is not matched by growth in investment.
He also expressed concern about the continued risk of volatility in
capital flows to emerging markets.
This heightened risk partly reflects a change in the structure of
global finance - there is not just a higher volume of capital flows but
also a change in the composition of these flows.
Geopolitical risks also warrant vigilance, Tharman said. The IMF
plays an important role in helping stabilise geopolitical crises and
de-escalate the associated economic risks, he said.
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde emphasised the need to
sustain the global recovery through the pursuit of better, more
inclusive, and more balanced growth.
She said the IMFC's strong endorsement of her Global Policy Agenda,
which provides encouragement for the IMF to move forward with what it
can offer the global community to promote growth.
The IMF's work on inequality supports the quest for inclusive growth,
Lagarde said. She said that higher quality growth - where such factors
as climate change and environmental degradation are taken into account -
is critically important. This is also an area of focus for the IMF's
work.
"We've worked on the removal of energy subsidies, we will soon be
publishing work on the setting of the right price for energy," Lagarde
said.
For all issues of macroeconomic relevance, she said, the IMF will
provide analysis and work with member countries to help them pursue
their chosen growth path.
Tharman and Lagarde expressed regret for the continued delay in
advancing the IMF quota and governance reforms agreed in 2010. "These
reforms to the Fund are not just institutional reforms, they're reforms
that will enable us to have a safer and better world, because the Fund
provides critical public goods," Tharman said.
At the G-20 press conference, Tharman said that there was
"significant goodwill" among ministers to find a way forward on the
quota issue and that there was consensus on the absolute importance of
maintaining a strong and adequately resourced IMF.
"We have a way forward," said Lagarde, adding that the IMFC set an
end-2014 deadline for ratification of the 2010 reforms. If this deadline
is not met, the IMF will develop options for the next steps.
Lagarde said that work in low-income countries continues to be a
priority for the IMF. The institution with the government of Mozambique,
the institution will hold a conference in Maputo from May 29-30 to take
stock of Africa's strong economic performance, its increased resilience
to shocks, and the key ongoing economic policy challenges. The event is
intended to follow up on the 2009 Tanzania Conference, which helped
galvanise international support for Africa after the 2008 financial
crisis.
The IMF is also actively involved with the Arab countries in
transition, Lagarde said, adding that three countries in the region -
Morocco, Tunisia, and Jordan - are engaged in an IMF-supported program.
The institution is organising a conference on May 11-12 in Amman,
Jordan, to promote regional dialogue on an economic vision for the Arab
countries in transition. The conference is cosponsored by the government
of Jordan and the Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development. |