From: Alejandro Valle Baeza (valle@SERVIDOR.UNAM.MX)
Date: Sun Jan 27 2008 - 20:10:00 EST
IMF head in
shock fiscal appeal
By Chris
Giles and Gillian Tett in Davos
Published:
The
intensifying credit crunch is so severe that lower interest rates alone
will
not be enough “to get out of the turmoil we are in”, Dominique
Strauss-Kahn,
the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, warned at the
weekend.
In a
dramatic volte face for an international body that as recently as the
autumn
called for “continued fiscal consolidation” in the US, Dominique
Strauss-Kahn,
the new IMF head, gave a green light for the proposed US fiscal
stimulus
package and called for other countries to follow suit. “I don’t think
we would
get rid of the crisis with just monetary tools,” he said, adding “a new
fiscal
policy is probably today an accurate way to answer the crisis”.
Mr
Strauss-Kahn’s words rip apart a long-standing global consensus that
fiscal
retrenchment in the
It comes as
the IMF is due to release new economic forecasts this week which, he
said,
would show a “serious slowdown and it needs a serious response”.
The US
Federal Reserve starts a regular meeting tomorrow and markets expect
another
half-point cut on top of the 0.75 percentage-point cut last week.
Mr
Strauss-Kahn’s dramatic change in stance amazed Larry Summers, the
former US
Treasury secretary. He is known for saying that the IMF stands for
“It’s Mostly
Fiscal” because the organisation has to be tough with countries’
budgetary
laxity.
But such is
his concern about economic prospects if the
The dark
economic mood in Davos was reinforced at the weekend by John Thain, the
new
chief executive of Merrill Lynch, who predicted the problems in
subprime
mortgage markets would spread to credit card and consumer loans. “It
will be a
while before you see a return to normality in the banking system,” he
said.
Thomas
Russo, vice-chairman of Lehman Brothers, said: “Absent government
intervention,
the economic picture is very grey but with government intervention you
have a
decent chance of stabilising the picture.”
The IMF’s
call for countries with strong fiscal positions to loosen their budgets
gained
approval from Christine Lagarde, the French finance minister, and
Palaniappan
Chidambaram, the Indian finance minister.
Ms Lagarde
suggested
But in a
rare direct reference to
However, it
is the global community’s lack of confidence that
But amid a
sudden enthusiasm for fiscal stimulus packages, some voiced caution.
Professor
Ken Rogoff of Harvard University and a former chief economist of the
IMF said
aggressive fiscal easing generates “more harm than good in most cases”,
leading
to unsustainable budgetary position that require painful correction in
the
longer term.
Posgrado Facultad de Economía
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México
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