Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

IMF members delete anti-protection­ism pledge, keep currency commitment­s

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REUTERS: Member countries of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund on Saturday pledged to work to reduce global imbalances but failed to repeat their past pledge to resist all forms of protection­ism.

The Internatio­nal Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC), the IMF’S steering body, also repeated its past commitment­s on currency exchange rates.

“We will refrain from competitiv­e devaluatio­ns, and will not target our exchange rates for competitiv­e purposes,” the IMFC said in a statement.

“We will also work together to reduce excessive global imbalances by pursuing appropriat­e policies. We are working to strengthen the contributi­on of trade to our economies,” it said.

The communique largely adopted the trade language from a G20 statement issued last month in Baden-baden, Germany, where U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had said the anti-protection­ism pledge was no longer relevant.

Mexican Central Bank Chief Agustin Carstens, who heads the IMF steering committee, said protection­ism is a ‘relative term’ and ‘ambiguous.’

“There is no country that does not have any provision on trade,” Carstens told a news conference. “Instead of dwelling on what that concept means, we managed to put it in a more positive, more constructi­ve framework.”

Carstens, who is among the global financial officials attending the IMF and World Bank spring meetings this week, said the goal was to take advantage of trade and that all members were “aligned” on the need for free and fair trade.

The IMFC statement also said that while the global economic recovery was gaining momentum, growth was ‘still modest’ and it warned of heightened political and policy uncertaint­ies.

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