Stabroek News Sunday

IMF closes Morocco meetings without consensus on funding terms, conflict language

-

Morocco, (Reuters) Internatio­nal Monetary Fund countries yesterday failed to agree on a U.S.-backed plan to boost IMF funding without giving more shares to China and other big emerging markets, but pledged a "meaningful increase" in lending resources by year-end.

As IMF and World Bank annual meetings in Morocco closed, a statement from IMF's steering committee chair called for new quota contributi­ons that would "at least maintain the Fund's current resource envelope" as $185 billion worth of bilateral borrowing arrangemen­ts expire.

Quotas, contribute­d by member countries in proportion to their shareholdi­ng, make up only about 40% of the IMF's roughly $1 trillion in lending firepower, and the Fund says a larger proportion of quotas would provide more lending certainty as economic shocks grow.

The U.S. Treasury plan for countries to contribute new quota funds in proportion to their current shareholdi­ngs -- unchanged since 2010 -- had won support from G7 countries, India and a number of other emerging markets.

China, whose economy is now three times the size it was in 2010, continued to push for more IMF shares. People's Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng said in a statement to the IMFC meeting that Beijing wanted both a quota increase and a realignmen­t of shares "to reflect members’ relative weights in the global economy, and strengthen the voice and representa­tion of emerging markets and developing countries."

IMFC members agreed to add a third IMF Executive Board chair to represent African countries, a key sweetener for the U.S. "equi-proportion­al quota plan. Pan said China supported this move but it was a separate issue from the shareholdi­ng formula.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana