综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

Business / Opinion

Power shift will fuel IMF restructuring

By Giles Chance (China Daily) Updated: 2014-04-21 06:56

Now, with the 188 members of the IMF gathered in Washington to hold its spring meeting, the question is: Will the US be able, on its own, to prevent change at the IMF? Or will change happen anyway, despite the US? Has a dramatic power shift in global affairs begun?

The idea to form the IMF immediately after World War II came from the British economist John Maynard Keynes. His view was that the IMF should be a global organization that would co-ordinate growth by managing the international monetary framework.

Power shift will fuel IMF restructuring
 Lagarde hails China's role at IMF

Power shift will fuel IMF restructuring
But this idea ran counter to the wish by the Americans to have the world economy run from Washington by the US Government, with the US dollar as the world currency. Instead, the IMF has become the lender of last resort to troubled economies around the world and a vital actor in economic crises, from Asia in 1997-98 to Europe in 2010-13. It remains a vital instrument of global governance, perhaps the one, with its focus on global money and global growth, to which China pays the most attention.

Today the IMF is based in Washington and is staffed with economists from around the world, but the US still controls it with an effective veto, holding 16.75 percent of the voting power, with an 85 percent voting majority required to approve important proposals and changes.

The US joined Britain as a cornerstone founder in 1945. As a result, important proposals requiring additional commitments from the US to the IMF have to be passed by the US Congress. The IMF voting structure, dating back 70 years, allows a fundamental change agreed on by all the IMF members except the US to be denied by a relatively small number of conservative US politicians. Yet, of course, the world is very different from what it was in 1945. Shouldn't the IMF's structure reflect that changed reality?

A recent article by James Roberts, an economist working at the right-wing US institution The Heritage Foundation, underlines the reasons for conservative Republicans in Congress to withhold their support for the IMF changes.

He argues that the proposals would turn the 24-person executive committee of the IMF into an elected body. At present the US has the right to appoint one member of this powerful committee. If the committee was an elected one, it is possible the US would not have any representation in the top echelons. In addition, the US now controls the allocation of $63 billion of extra funds available to the IMF for lending in a crisis, because it contributed $18 billion to this pool. The proposed change would give authority of this supplemental lending to the executive board.

The author is a visiting professor at Guanghua School of Management, Peking University. The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...
...
工布江达县| 南华县| 光山县| 沂水县| 青河县| 离岛区| 曲水县| 连南| 台东县| 衡东县| 吉木乃县| 文化| 陕西省| 奉新县| 凭祥市| 通山县| 娱乐| 慈溪市| 清水县| 旬邑县| 五常市| 赣州市| 铜梁县| 沈丘县| 怀化市| 南丹县| 个旧市| 金堂县| 永顺县| 根河市| 六枝特区| 凯里市| 荆门市| 阳高县| 大英县| 冷水江市| 江源县| 东源县| 广元市| 永平县| 蓬安县|