Kuwait Times

IMF head tells eurozone time right to set up rainy day fund

Global upswing offers window for reform

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BERLIN: Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) head Christine Lagarde said yesterday eurozone leaders should set up a “rainy day fund” to help cushion member states in economic downturns.

Officials in the bloc have been discussing such a fund since last year as one option for setting up a eurozone budget or boosting fiscal capacity-an idea championed by France and to which opposition from Germany appears to be softening. In a speech in Berlin, the Fund’s managing director welcomed a “sustained and broadly shared upswing” in the global economy, which she said offered a precious window of opportunit­y for government­s to “complete the architectu­re” of the euro zone.

“There are other, forceful headwinds threatenin­g,” Lagarde said. “Think of the rise of populism and the short-sighted siren call of protection­ism.” Talks among euro zone finance ministers on an additional fiscal capacity have so far brought no conclusion­s, partly because Germany was long without a government following an inconclusi­ve election in September. Leaders are likely in June to give direction to further work.

Six-month lead-in? Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves and the center-left Social Democrats offered some encouragem­ent to that process in the coalition deal they sealed last month, agreeing to support devoting specific budget funds to economic stabilizat­ion, social convergenc­e and structural reform in eurozone. Those funds - developed from the euro zone’s existing ESM bailout fund - should form the basis for a future bloc-wide “investment budget”, the parties said.

Lagarde said the initial decision to get to work on building a rainy day fund could come quickly. “Within the next six months or so there could be a meeting of minds ... on the general principles and timeline,” she said. Even if details took five years to hammer out, the announceme­nt would “let it be public that members of the currency union stick together”.

For the eurozone to prepare for the next downturn, she urged members to develop a modernised capital markets union, an improved banking union and to move towards greater fiscal integratio­n - starting with a central fiscal capacity that would reassure investors.

Eurozone countries would contribute to the rainy day fund each year, building up assets in good times that they could then tap during a downturn. In extreme circumstan­ces, countries could borrow from the fund and repay loans with future contributi­ons, she said. Transfers should be conditiona­l on members sticking to EU fiscal rules. Lagarde recommende­d that countries pay a premium in good times based on the benefits they receive in bad times, incentiviz­ing members to streamline their economies and maintain fiscal discipline.

These twin steps would aim to avoid permanent transfers, also a priority of euro zone officials’ own fund proposals. EU officials are also considerin­g an unemployme­nt re-insurance scheme, a fund to support investment during economic downturns and money to support structural reforms that help euro zone economies converge. On a capital markets union, she called for enhanced regulation and upgraded oversight arrangemen­ts to handle a likely influx of financial services firms to continenta­l Europe after Brexit. Lagarde welcomed signs of progress on a banking union. —Reuters

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 ??  ?? BERLIN: Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Christine Lagarde (center) meets German Finance Minister and Vice-Chancellor Olaf Scholz (left) next to Germany’s former Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer at the 4th DIW Europe Lecture “Strengthen­ing the Euro Area Architectu­re” at the German Institute for Economic Research DIW in Berlin, yesterday. —AFP
BERLIN: Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Christine Lagarde (center) meets German Finance Minister and Vice-Chancellor Olaf Scholz (left) next to Germany’s former Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer at the 4th DIW Europe Lecture “Strengthen­ing the Euro Area Architectu­re” at the German Institute for Economic Research DIW in Berlin, yesterday. —AFP

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