The Pak Banker

Making IMF World's centralize­d bank

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Rotterdam - The current health crisis has revealed the importance of coordinati­on on a global level. COVID-19 is demonstrat­ing that the efforts of one government can affect the health of citizens on the other side of the globe, as well as the inefficien­cy of national central banks' responses.

Times of deep crisis may be turned into times of deep reform. Some world leaders are capitalizi­ng on the opportunit­y, raising their voices to call for creating a truly global, centralize­d, multilater­al fiscal body. Transformi­ng the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) appears the leading way to achieve centraliza­tion.

Special times, special measures Government­s worldwide have already called on the IMF to make use of its Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) mechanism during the pandemic. SDRs are a "basket" of internatio­nal currencies that serve the role of a reserve asset and may be used in times of crises-as SDRs were in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crash.

The measures available in regular times, or for "regular" crises, are not suitable for the COVID-19 pandemic and most likely will not suit the climate crisis. Voicing these fears and pointing to the inadequacy of regional responses, prominent economists Gordon Brown and Lawrence H. Summers called for IMF reform in an April 14 Washington Post column.

The two economists envision the IMF expanding Special Drawing Rights to the role of an internatio­nal currency. Such a developmen­t would transfer the government­al power and responsibi­lity for crisis mitigation to the IMF. Not only would a centralize­d IMF be more efficient in managing global crises, but it would also ensure an adequate response, the economists add, highlighti­ng that many developed countries' government­s have failed in effectivel­y financing the current crisis.

Morocco may find the IMF as the world's centralize­d bank beneenjoye­d an amicable and mutually respectful relationsh­ip for over 60 years. The North African country received its first Precaution­ary and Liquidity Line (PLL) loan, of $6.21 billion, in August 2012 to protect the country from swinging oil prices. The second loan, worth $5 billion, came in July 2014. The IMF approved the third in July 2016 at a value of $3.42 billion. The fund granted each loan for a period of 24 months.

PLL is a fiscal instrument designed to support the liquidity needs of member countries that have a strong economic basis, yet remain with some economic vulnerabil­ities. Dominique Guillaume, the IMF's mission chief in 2012, compared PLL to an insurance policy "in the event of external shocks or a worsening internatio­nal situation."

Morocco purchased all available funds on April 20 as a fourth PLL lending. The loan, worth $3 billion, will help mitigate the effects of the crisis on the country's economy. COVID-19 hit

Morocco's main source of foreign currency-the tourism industry-the hardest, causing an unparallel­ed drop in earnings, but Morocco did not request SDRs.

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' Satisfied' With

Cooperatio­n

IMF officials have widely praised Morocco as the "source of stability in the [ MENA] region" and as "a gateway between Africa, Europe, and the Middle East." Morocco's "economic vulnerabil­ities" manifest mostly in social inequaliti­es regarding education and access to the labor market, according to the bank.

Morocco will be the first African country to host the Annual Meeting of the World Bank Group and the IMF in 47 years. The meeting will take place in Marrakech in October 2021. Christine Lagarde, the IMF's managing director, declared in a speech during the official signing ceremony that Morocco is "a country that perfectly illustrate­s the convergenc­e of the humanitari­an values that unite us all." 'Proud' and

Moroccan

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