Khaleej Times

IMF reforms hit snag

G-20 finance ministers ‘deeply disappoint­ed’ with US delay

- Lidia Kelly

washington — Reforms to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund have hit a deadlock despite a declaratio­n from global financial chiefs that they would move forward without the United States if it fails to ratify the changes by year-end, a G-20 official said on Sunday.

The inability to proceed with giving emerging markets a more powerful voice at the IMF and shoring up the lender’s resources appeared the most contentiou­s issue for officials from the Group of 20 leading economies and the representa­tives for all IMF member nations who met over the weekend.

In a final communique, G-20 finance ministers and central bankers said they were “deeply disappoint­ed” with the US delay.

“Some said that we need to give the US more space,” the official, who participat­ed in the G-20 talks and spoke on conditions of anonymity, said. “I say we are at a dead end.”

Any attempt to break the package of reforms, proposed by the G-20 in 2010, would be disastrous not only for the United States, but for the whole group, he said, because most countries have already gone through the ratificati­on procedures.

“If you pull the 2010 package apart, you will have to start anew,” the official said. “And this factor cannot be overcome. How to overcome it? Nobody wants to go again through this process for the second time.”

Other officials were not immediatel­y available for comment.

Mission impossible?

Emerging markets, most handicappe­d by the lack of reforms, expressed exasperati­on over the weekend that a four-year wait for the reforms is asking too much of them. But it is unclear what moves could be taken to overcome the impasse.

There could be some ad hoc measures taken to achieve at least some of the governance overhaul for the global lender without formal US approval. Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said developing nations may demand changes to the IMF’s emergency borrowing mechanism if the United States does not approve the overhaul.

Most of the solutions, however, giving the structure of decision making at the IMF, could not be implemente­d without the US approval. US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said President Barack Obama’s administra­tion would do its best to push IMF quota reforms through the US Congress this year.

Christine Lagarde, managing director of the IMF, said it is too early to talk about alternativ­es. “Plan A is going to be explored to the end, and in depth, but if that plan A doesn’t work, then we will worry about plan B.”

For now, the G-20 official said, there is no plan B.

“There is nowhere to go,” he said. “Initially, you have a discussion, but then when you move to details, there is nothing.”

The impasse in the reforms has already had some side effects, including the increase in regional funds that act on a smaller scale, but which altogether could potentiall­y undermine the role of the IMF in the future.

At the G-20 meeting over the weekend, officials tried to stay optimistic that the US, despite complaints from some Republican­s have that the changes would cost too much at a time Washington was running big budget deficits, will come forward.

But the prospects are not promising, the G-20 official said.

“It is impossible to defend national interests, and we are all forced to do so, and not offer a breakthrou­gh solution that would respond to current needs,” he said.

“At a time when the world has become multi-polar, why should one country should have the veto power?” —

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