Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Christine Lagarde speaking in Washington today AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais
IMF

IMF chief wants 'more firepower' to fight crises

Christine Lagarde said that the global recovery is growing stronger but still is very fragile.

THE HEAD OF the International Monetary Fund said today that the global recovery is growing stronger but still is very fragile.

She called on the international community to give her organisation “more firepower” to help keep tottering economies from going under.

“We certainly need more resources,” Christine Lagarde told the annual meeting of The Associated Press, without specifying how much more was needed. Lagarde said the IMF would address that question at its spring meeting in two weeks.

The IMF currently has about $400 billion in resources that it can use to provide loans to countries in trouble. Lagarde has talked about expanding those resources to close to $1 trillion.

Lagarde said the global economy is making some advances in digging itself out of the worst downturn in decades, but that the recovery remains particularly frail in Europe. She suggested cutting government spending too quickly in developed countries like the United States and larger European nations could make things worse, not better.

Policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic need “breathing space to finish the job,” she said. Lagarde also said that Europe’s faltering would quickly spread and the U.S. recovery, slowly gaining strength, “might well be in jeopardy.”

“America has a large stake” in how Europe and the rest of the world fares,” Lagarde said.

Emergency programmes

The IMF official said it is important to continue and expand emergency programmes among the 17 countries that use the euro to help heavily indebted countries there.

“We should not delude ourselves into a false sense of security,” she said. “The recovery is still very fragile. The financial system in Europe is still under heavy strain. Debt is still too high, public and private. Stubbornly high unemployment is straining the seams of society. ….Rising oil prices are clearly another cloud on the horizon.”

Lagarde’s remarks came after the Eurozone countries on Friday boosted their emergency bailout funds for heavily indebted countries by $1.1 trillion (€800 billion). That was short of the $1.3 trillion (€1 trillion) that Lagarde and other international leaders have said is needed to calm financial markets.

During a brief question-and-answer period, Lagarde was asked whether some of the more debt-burdened countries would be better off leaving the group.

As to the size of the eurozone and whether Greece, Portugal and whoever else should or should not be in, you know, it’s a very deeply rooted sentiment that the Europeans, particularly from that area, have, that what they have built over the last 50 years or so, right after the second World War, is something that they are very, very attached to.

“And from discussions I’ve had with many leaders, including from the lead countries in the Eurozone, I don’t think that there is any political intention, disclosed or hidden, to actually break up that zone,” she said.

Lagarde also suggested that bold steps are needed such as those taken by the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank to help “keep growth strong and steady.”

And she said that most countries are running deficits that are too high and “need to bring down debt over time” And while “some countries under pressure have no choice but to cut deficits today…a global undifferentiated rush to austerity will prove self-defeating. Countries like the United States with low costs of borrowing should not move too quickly.”

Lagarde noted that over 200 million people globally, including nearly 13 million in the U.S., are without work, declaring that “jobs must be a priority.”

Budget body says Ireland could need €400m mini-budget >

German central bank ‘to stop taking Irish bonds as collateral’ >

Author
Associated Foreign Press
Your Voice
Readers Comments
10
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.