[stop-imf] Statement on Rato's Appointment as IMF Managing Director
robert.weissman@essentialinformation.org
robert.weissman@essentialinformation.org
Tue, 4 May 2004 23:15:28 -0400 (EDT)
From: "50 Years Is Enough Network" <list@50years.org>
Note: the FT article referenced in the statement appears
immediately after the statement.
50 Years Is Enough: U.S. Network for Global Economic
Justice
IMF CRITICS DENOUNCE SELECTION OF RATO AS NEW CHIEF
WASHINGTON, DC - May 4 2004 - The 50 Years Is Enough
Network, a coalition of over 200 U.S. organizations
dedicated to the fundamental transformation of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank,
issued the following statement today in response to the
IMF board's expected naming of Rodrigo Rato as the
institution's new Managing Director:
Two months ago, when Horst Koehler resigned as head of the
IMF, the institution was presented with an opportunity to
demonstrate that it was serious about becoming
transparent, accountable, and open. With the culmination
of that process today, the IMF has failed on all counts.
Just as in the case of every previous Managing Director,
Rodrigo Rato is from Western Europe, and was chosen
through an opaque series of back-room negotiations among
that region's IMF shareholder governments. Only a handful
of European officials were so bold as to defend the custom
of reserving the position for someone from their region,
but none took any tangible steps to change it. Dozens of
respected observers called for an opening of the process.
Koehler himself in the last few days has called for a
restructuring of the IMF. A large proportion of IMF staff
endorsed a statement calling for an open process.
Guideline for the selection process formulated by a joint
IMF/World Bank committee after objections were raised to
the manner in which Koehler was nominated were largely
ignored on the grounds that the board never officially
adopted them.
Indeed, we can only address today's board meeting in
generalities, since neither the public nor the media will
be allowed to learn what was said or what positions
individual board members took - not because of the
sensitivity of the topic, but because that is the rule for
all IMF board meetings, where all policy decisions are
made and loans approved.
It is ironic that, according to the Financial Times,
reports from within the board suggest that the most
significant concern about Rato's candidacy was his
contention that the IMF is more a "political" than a
technocratic institution. This obvious fact has long been
denied by the IMF in its quest to appear neutral and
scientifically objective. Surely the manner of Rato's
selection is the best proof of his observation: hardly a
nod to any process designed to find the best candidate,
just the whim of the region with one-third of the votes at
the board.
Some at the IMF will point to the nomination of Mohammed
El-Erian, from Egypt, and his official interview with the
board as a sign of increased openness. The usefulness of
the precedent set, however, was put in perspective by an
IMF executive director quoted by the Financial Times: "It
was not a total success in that the decision as to who is
going to get the job has already been made."
Europe's collective domination of the votes at the IMF was
augmented by the support of the United States government,
the largest single shareholder. Once Europe settled on
Rato as its candidate, the U.S. signalled its approval -
hardly a surprise, since it will want similar cooperation
when it comes time to exercise its customary prerogative
to unilaterally name the President of the World Bank next
year.
The reprise of the closed selection process for Managing
Director confirms our view of the IMF: it is a
multilateral institution in which control is tightly held
by a small number of governments, none of which are IMF
clients. The programs mandated by the IMF benefit
business and investor interests in that same small groups
of countries, but have done inestimable harm to literally
billions of people in the rest of the world over the last
25 years. No Managing Director chosen by the IMF board
would be likely to change the direction of the
institution. What is striking is how careful the reigning
powers are to make sure that their control remains
absolute. Today's appointment of Rodrigo Rato is sad
confirmation that the IMF has no intention of becoming
more open, accountable, or transparent - least of all to
the people who suffer under its policies.
As the IMF marks its 60th anniversary, it is clear that
real change will not happen through internal processes,
but will require political pressure from people around the
world. The 50 Years Is Enough Network, together with its
partners and allies around the world, will redouble its
efforts to ensure that such pressure is applied.
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3DRato to be appointed IMF managing director
By Andrew Balls in Washington
FT.com site; May 02, 2004 (printed May 3, 2004)
Rodrigo Rato, the former Spanish finance minister, will on
Tuesday be confirmed as the new managing director of the
International Monetary Fund.
On the eve of Mr Rato's appointment, Horst K=F6hler, former
managing director of the IMF, has called for a reweighting
of votes on the IMF's board to give developing countries a
bigger say in Fund decision-making.
The support of Europe and the US mean it is a foregone
conclusion that Mr Rato will be appointed to the vacancy -
rather than Mohamed El-Erian, the other official
candidate, a former senior member of the Fund staff and
now head of portfolio management at Pimco, the fund
manager.
The appointment will be announced later in the week in a
press conference in Madrid. Mr Rato is expected to take up
the post in June.
In an interview with the IMF's in-house magazine, Mr
K=F6hler, the leading candidate in Germany's presidential
elections, said that current IMF quotas are outdated. The
votes of emerging market and low income countries "no
longer reflect their true weight in the world economy," he
said.
Mr K=F6hler called for a "bold political gesture" in which
the European Union gives up its representation - which is
spread across 10 chairs - for a single EU seat, citing his
vision of "ever closer political union in Europe".
Europe controls more than a third of the votes on the
board while non-European countries outside the Group of
Seven high-income countries command only a third of the
votes. The US has a 17.4 per cent voting share.
In an informal interview with the IMF board on Thursday,
Mr Rato laid out his views on the workings of the Fund and
the relationship between the board, the staff and the IMF
shareholders.
However, his comments that he regards the IMF primarily as
a political institution, and that technical analysis must
play a secondary role to politics, went down badly with
some executive directors and staff members.
Mr El-Erian, in his informal interview on Wednesday,
demonstrated detailed knowledge across a wide range of
issues relating to the Fund and its work, according to
people present.
Mr El-Erian told the FT: "What occurred on Wednesday and
Thursday is an important step in making the process of
selecting the IMF managing director more open and more
inclusive," he said.
The IMF board will tomorrow hold two secret votes - a
straw poll to indicate support for the two candidates
followed by an official ballot.
"This process gives the chance to reach unanimity on the
appointment but also will allow directors to express their
preference in the first round," an executive director
said.
Speaking of the precedent that has been set, the director
said: "A non-European was accorded the same treatment as a
European. It was not a total success in that the decision
as to who is going to get the job has already been made.
But a process is in place for next time, even if it is an
imperfect one."
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