Two Wrongs Don’t Make a
Right at the IMF and World Bank


Kenneth Rogoff


 


One has go back to the “Year of Three Popes” (1978) to
find a succession drama as strange as what has been happening at the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, the two pillars of the global
financial system. Two months ago, Bank President Paul Wolfowitz resigned amidst
an extraordinary staff mutiny and governance debacle. Now, his counterpart at
the International Monetary Fund, the former Spanish Finance Minister Rodrigo 
Rato,
has shocked major stakeholders by announcing that he, too, will leave in
October.


To lose one international lending institution head is
misfortune, to lose two looks like carelessness (my apologies to Oscar Wilde).
Coming on the tenth year anniversary of the Asian financial crisis, the caldron
in which today’s ultra-liquid capital markets were forged, conspiracy theories
abound.


Frankly, sticking to the public record, the two
resignations seem like night and day. When Wolfowitz was finally pushed out 
after
a bruising battle, Bank staff were beside themselves with joy. By contrast,
most IMF staff seem genuinely depressed by Rato’s departure.


Wolfowitz’s pre-Bank claim to fame was his role as an
architect of the Iraq
war, arguably one of the greatest strategic debacles since Napoleon’s invasion
of Russia.
Rato, by contrast, was Spain’s
finance minister during the country’s best economic era since the sixteenth
century.


Under Wolfowitz, the World Bank failed to introduce any
serious governance reforms to reflect the rising economic power of Asia.
Under Rato, the IMF at least took some modest steps towards giving China
and other rapidly emerging markets more say in running the place. At the same
time as Rato pushed reluctant European nations to yield some of their power in
the Fund, he introduced reforms that clarified and strengthened the Fund’s role
in managing exchange rates.


Indeed, a week before Rato’s resignation announcement, the
Fund asserted that it had the right to censure countries whose intervention 
policies
threaten to undermine global economic stability. The Fund’s policy change drew
the ire of Chinese officials, who have been intervening on a biblical scale to
hold down the value of their currency, the Yuan.


When the Fund gets the big boys to complain by saying
perfectly sensible things, it must be doing something right. True, the Fund has
been notably soft on the United States
of late, downplaying the continuing vulnerabilities posed by the gaping US
current account and trade deficits. One imagines this compelling theme will
return soon enough.


Although there are vast differences surrounding the
departure of the IMF and Bank heads, there are some worrisome similarities.
First, there is every sign that the Europeans will use Rato’s sudden
announcement as an excuse to avoid a serious debate about relinquishing their
privilege of always appointing the Fund’s head True the US
was able to essentially blackmail the world into choosing yet another American
to replace Wolfowitz, by balking at efforts to push him out peaceably. But the
Europeans have no such leverage at the Fund, where Rato has elected to go out
under his own steam.


There is ample time between now and October for the IMF to
install an open and fair selection process that will lead to the best person
being chosen, regardless of nationality. Central banks around the world have
been enormously successful by choosing technocrats and people with proven
knowledge and experience to head their institutions, rather than accepting
purely political appointments. On merit, some of the obvious candidates for the
Fund job, such as Brazilian Arminio Fraga, and Egyptian-born Mohamed El-Erian,
are not European.


A second similarity is that both institutions face deep
existential crises. In today’s world of deep and liquid global financial
markets, the main lending instruments of the IMF and and the Bank are largely
unnecessary and redundant.


Absent serious reform, both are on tract to go into deep
hibernation as the Bank for International Settlements did for forty years prior
to its recent resurgence. The BIS, founded in 1930 to help manage German
reparation payments and to coordinate activities among central banks, served as
little more than repository for gold reserves in the years following World War
II. As central banks have gained status in recent years, and thanks to
imaginative leadership, the BIS has reawakened and taken on a number of
important roles, including setting international regulatory standards for
global banking.


While it is encouraging to know that a hibernating IMF and
World Bank may some day reawaken, it would be far better to see them
invigorated now. A more globalized world needs global financial institutions,
but ones that focus on coordination, supervision and technical advice, not
redundant lending mechanisms.


Before any real change can place, both institutions
require fundamental governance changes. The puzzling circumstances of the IMF
head’s sudden departure announcement do not justify a business as usual
approach to his replacement. Nor does the closed-door succession process at the
Bank, where the US
continued its sixty year lock on the Presidency, justify continuing European
monopolization of the Fund job. Two wrongs do not make a right.


** Kenneth Rogoff is
Professor of Economics and Public Policy at Harvard University, and was
formerly chief economist at the IMF.


Copyright: Project
Syndicate, 2007. http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/rogoff32







       
____________________________________________________________________________________
Pinpoint customers who are looking for what you sell. 
http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



=========================
Arsip Milis AKI online, demi kenyamanan Anda semua
http://www.mail-archive.com/ahlikeuangan-indonesia@yahoogroups.com/
-------------------------
Ingin improve kemampuan English Anda? Atau berbagi dgn berinteraksi atau 
mengkoreksi English dgn sesama? Join for free lifelong english lesson di
sharing_english_lesson-subscribe@@yahoogroups.com
-------------------------
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AhliKeuangan-Indonesia/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AhliKeuangan-Indonesia/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Kirim email ke