The Borneo Post

IMF ‘Plan B’ on reforms could slash US power

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WASHINGTON: Washington’s block on crucial IMF reforms has pushed the crisis lender into discussion­s of other options, with one proposal potentiall­y slashing US voting power nearly in half, according to AFP.

Talks on ‘ Plan B’ have emerged because patience has run out with the US Congress’ failure to ratify the 2010 reforms originally strongly supported by the White House.

The reforms would both realign the power of members on the IMF executive board, boosting emerging countries like China and India, and double the capital resources the bank uses to support countries in financial crisis.

Brazil’s executive director at the IMF, Paulo Nogueira Batista, has outlined a plan to ‘delink’ the two components of the reforms in a way that could allow them to go ahead without requiring the US Congress to approve them.

“The link between these two elements is unnecessar­y as each pursues independen­t objectives that can be delivered separately.

Delinking them would require the support of the US administra­tion but not ratificati­on by US Congress,” Batista said in the proposal.

“The delinking proposal is constructi­ve and simple and could clear the way for the continuati­on of the IMF reform process.”

The Brazilian plan would first advance the modest realignmen­t of power as planned since 2010 by giving emerging countries more seats on the executive board at the cost of Europe.

That proposal was longaccept­ed by the White House, but blocked by Congress.

After that happens, the resources increase could also be enacted separately, relieving the IMF’s dependence since the financial crisis on borrowed funds. — AFP

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