The Philippine Star

IMF approves changes to economic surveillan­ce rules

-

WASHINGTON ( Reuters) — The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) approved changes to its annual economic surveillan­ce rules on Wednesday that now make it mandatory for the Fund to assess whether the domestic policies of a country are affecting global financial stability.

Until now, IMF assessment­s of economic spillovers were voluntary but the 2007-2009 global financial crisis showed how quickly and easily the economic and financial policies of one country can cascade across borders and destabiliz­e the world.

“While oversight of members’ exchange rate policies remains at the core of Fund surveillan­ce under the articles, the new decision will provide a basis for the Fund to engage more effectivel­y with members on domestic economic and financial policies,” said IMF managing director Christine Lagarde.

The decision was an important step in “rebooting” the way the IMF conducts surveillan­ce – the monitoring and assessment of members’ economies, and global economic and financial developmen­ts, Legarde said.

The new rules will be included in the IMF’s so-called Article IV annual consultati­ons between the IMF and government­s of its 188 member countries. IMF officials said the decision had “broad support” among the membership.

In 2009, former IMF managing firector Dominique Strauss-Kahn revised IMF rules on currency surveillan­ce policies announced in 2007 after China refused to cooperate. Beijing saw the IMF’s move to step up oversight of currencies as a ploy to enlist the Fund in its campaign for a stronger yuan.

An IMF official said the new surveillan­ce decision provided ground rules for fair and even-handed monitoring of such things as exchange rates, monetary and fiscal policies, and capital flows.

The IMF is expected to publish a more substantia­l document on the new surveillan­ce decision next week.

 ??  ?? A teller counts Indonesian rupiah notes at a currency exchange point in Jakarta. Indonesia’s weakening rupiah and widening current account deficit are raising concerns about Southeast Asia’s largest economy, which is struggling against contagion from...
A teller counts Indonesian rupiah notes at a currency exchange point in Jakarta. Indonesia’s weakening rupiah and widening current account deficit are raising concerns about Southeast Asia’s largest economy, which is struggling against contagion from...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines