The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Lagarde admits IMF’s ‘harsh’ conversion to inequality crisis

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DAVOS (Switzerlan­d). - IMF head Christine Lagarde conceded yesterday the Washington lender had been late waking up to the widening gap between rich and poor around the world, but is now researchin­g answers to the problem.

“There has been a strong backlash (against) economists in particular saying that this was not really of their business to worry about these things, including in my own institutio­n,” Lagarde told an audience of high-flying executives at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund is “now being very harshly converted to the importance of inequality and studying it and providing policies in response to that”, she said.

An Oxfam report coinciding with Davos this week said eight billionair­e men own the same wealth as the poorest half of the world’s population.

That level of inequality “threatens to pull our societies apart”, Oxfam said.

For its part, the IMF often demands unpopular reforms from government­s in return for its financial aid stoking voter discontent where it is active, including in Greece.

Lagarde has been trying to make the IMF more responsive to public disquiet and has speaking out about inequality linked to globalisat­ion, as voters in the West increasing­ly turn to populist parties.

“When you have a real crisis or when you have very strong signals as we have received from the voters from people who say no, it’s really time to say . . . what more can we do,” she said.

“If policymake­rs do not get the signal now, I don’t know when they will.”

 ??  ?? Christine Lagarde
Christine Lagarde

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