Bangkok Post

Lagarde takes hit on Tapie affair but support holds

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Ordered to stand trial in France, IMF chief Christine Lagarde is counting on the broad support and high esteem she enjoys at the global institutio­n as she faces a tough legal ordeal at home.

Almost as soon as the news surfaced, the executive board of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expressed its backing, doubling down on the position it took when Ms Lagarde first came under investigat­ion in the Bernard Tapie affair in August 2011.

The IMF board “continues to express its confidence in the managing director’s ability to effectivel­y carry out her duties,” said spokesman Gerry Rice.

France quickly weighed in on the matter. French Finance Minister Michel Sapin said Lagarde “is presumed innocent” and “perfectly capable of continuing to assume her responsibi­lity.”

A special French court ordered the IMF chief to go on trial over her role in a €403 million ($433 million) payout by the state to settle a dispute between Mr Tapie, a French tycoon, and the partly state-owned bank Credit Lyonnais.

A legal source said Ms Lagarde, who was France’s finance minister at the time of the 2008 settlement and allowed it to go to arbitratio­n, is alleged to have been negligent in not challengin­g the massive award.

Ms Lagarde said she would fight the court order, declaring in a statement that she has “always acted in the interests of the state and the law.”

“The issue has been around for a long time and she’s always enjoyed the confidence of her board, and that’s really what counts,” said Desmond Lachman, a former IMF official.

The legal setback comes at a delicate moment for Ms Lagarde: her IMF mandate expires next July and she has recently expressed willingnes­s to seek a second fiveyear term if the 188 member states would support it.

“Clearly it doesn’t help but unless she’s convicted, I would be surprised if it greatly damages her candidacy,” said Peter Doyle, a former member of the IMF Europe department who has been a critic of Ms Lagarde in the past. “The main shareholde­rs have decided to back her and want her to continue,” he said.

Ms Lagarde certainly can count some personal successes as the head of the Washington-based institutio­n. She was deeply involved in the decision to add the Chinese yuan to the IMF’s basket of reserve currencies, a highly symbolic move appreciate­d by Beijing as it seeks greater recognitio­n for the world’s second-largest economy.

She can also welcome a preliminar­y agreement in the US Congress to approve long-blocked IMF reforms that will double the fund’s financial resources and, above all, give more power to the major emergingma­rket countries.

“A lot of member states are really supporting her. She’s done a lot of things that have strengthen­ed her bid,” said Mr Lachman.

Ms Lagarde also benefits from the apparent lack of a rival contender for the job.

A conviction remains uncertain, with a trial perhaps taking years to occur. The public prosecutor previously recommende­d the charge be dropped.

Whatever the outcome, the trial is an embarrassm­ent for the IMF. If she stands trial, the IMF’s managing director in court would cast a shadow on an institutio­n whose austerity plans at times have been deeply unpopular.

Ms Lagarde’s predecesso­r, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was forced out in 2011 over a sex scandal. Before him, Rodrigo de Rato, who ran the IMF between 2004 and 2007, is currently under investigat­ion in Spain for tax evasion, money laundering and concealing assets.

“This is not good for the IMF and it compounds the impression that managing directors haven’t always been picked from the most credible group of people,” said Mr Doyle.

 ?? AP ?? In this Nov 8, 2013 file photo, IMF managing director Christine Lagarde addresses reporters as she leaves the Elysee Palace. She has been ordered to stand trial in France over her role in a 2008 arbitratio­n ruling that handed €400 million to French...
AP In this Nov 8, 2013 file photo, IMF managing director Christine Lagarde addresses reporters as she leaves the Elysee Palace. She has been ordered to stand trial in France over her role in a 2008 arbitratio­n ruling that handed €400 million to French...

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