“Ye offspring of vipers, who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?” Luke 3:7

United States Calls for Rigorous IMF Surveillance

Tue, 6th October, 2009 - Posted by Joshuah

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Tuesday called on the International Monetary Fund to provide rigorous surveillance to spot new investment bubbles and keep country foreign exchange policies in line with goals to rebalance the global economy.

In remarks prepared for delivery to the IMF and World Bank annual meetings here, Geithner said the IMF needed to help police economic and currency policies among the Group of 20 developed and emerging countries.

“The IMF will need to be a truth-teller,” Geithner said in the remarks, which were to be delivered by Treasury Acting Assistant Secretary Mark Sobel.

“For the IMF, this means that rigorous surveillance must help us shed light on trends that could lead to the next unsustainable boom,” Geithner said. “Under the new G20 framework for strong, sustainable and balanced growth, the IMF must provide forward-looking analysis of whether the world’s major countries are implementing economic policies, including exchange rate policies, which are collectively consistent with G20 objectives.”

Geithner said the global economy was stabilizing and showing initial signs of recovery but conditions remained fragile. He said the international community had recognized that “the world cannot return to a pattern of uneven growth, characterized by an excessive reliance on a single engine of consumption-led growth, while others relied heavily on external demand.”

“First and foremost, the responsibility for tackling these problems rests with sovereign governments, including my own,” he said.

Source/Full Story: ABC News
Technorati Tags:

Related Items

  • World Bank welcomes new world economic order from the ashes of crisis
  • US economic decline forges new world order
  • Global Confidence Drops as Unemployment Surge Counters Stimulus
  • World Bank offers dire forecast for world economy
  • Head of IMF Proposes New Reserve Currency as Alternative to USD
Category : Economics