Edmonton Journal

Lagarde resigns as IMF chief

- Lesley Wroughton

WASHINGTON Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde announced on Tuesday she had submitted her resignatio­n from the global lender, saying she had more clarity about her nomination to be the next head of the European Central Bank.

Lagarde said in a statement her resignatio­n was effective Sept. 12, opening the way for the IMF to launch the search for her successor, which is likely to be another European.

“With greater clarity now on the process for my nomination as ECB President and the time it will take, I have made this decision in the best interest of the Fund,” Lagarde said in a statement.

She said her resignatio­n would expedite the selection for the next head of the IMF.

Lagarde’s resignatio­n comes two weeks after her nomination on July 2 for the ECB’S top job. She did not immediatel­y resign from the IMF because of uncertaint­y over whether the new European Parliament would support her and other new EU leadership positions, sources told Reuters.

While a vote from the European Parliament is needed, its outcome is not binding, and Lagarde’s appointmen­t will be finalized by EU leaders at a regular summit on October 17-18

Lagarde’s decision to resign comes on the eve of a meeting of the Group of Seven finance ministers in Chantilly, France.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is slated to meet with Bank of England Governor Mark Carney — one of the leading candidates to replace Lagarde — on Wednesday evening on the sidelines of the meeting.

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow last week declined to comment when asked about Carney as a possible replacemen­t for Lagarde.

Other names being floated include Bank of Finland Governor Olli Rehn, as well as Germany’s Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann, and ECB executive board member Benoit Coeuré.

Kristalina Georgieva, a Bulgarian national who is currently chief executive officer of the World Bank, has been seen as having an outside chance, according to IMF sources.

A former French finance minister, Lagarde was the first woman to head the IMF and was known among policymake­rs as a tough negotiator. She was a tireless advocate for the benefits of trade, global growth that aids the poor and middle classes, and the empowermen­t of women.

Her second five-year term as head of the IMF was not due to end until July 2021. Traditiona­lly, the post has always been held by a European, while the head of the IMF’S sister organizati­on, the World Bank, has always been an American since the institutio­ns were created at the end of World War Two.

If approved, Lagarde would take over as ECB president from Mario Draghi on Oct. 31.

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