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A European to lead the IMF, again?

July 26, 2019

EU governments are trying to agree on one European candidate to succeed Christine Lagarde at the helm of the IMF, a French official said. The global monetary body wants to select a new leader by October.

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Washington IWF Logo Symbolbild
Image: Getty Images/AFP/M. Ngan

European Union governments are working to put forward a joint candidate to pick up the reins of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) from the outgoing chief Christine Lagarde, a French official said on Friday.   

The official said the candidate will be selected from a list of five names:

  • Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutch former head of eurozone finance ministers
  • Nadia Calvino, the Spanish economy minister
  • Mario Centeno, the Portuguese chairman of eurozone finance ministers
  • Olli Rehn, the Finnish central bank governor
  • Kristalina Georgieva, the Bulgarian chief executive of the World Bank.

Read more: Christine Lagarde steps down as IMF chief, to take up ECB post

The top job at the IMF came vacant after Lagarde resigned from the post, effective September 12, following her nomination to lead the European Central Bank (ECB).

The IMF board announced on Friday that the selection process for the next head would start on July 29 and last until September 6, which is the final day for submitting a candidate's name.

The new managing director will be appointed by the IMF's 24-person executive board by October 4.

The timeframe means a new IMF chief will be in place in time for the lender's annual meeting in mid-October.

Christine Lagarde in Marokko
Lagarde has been nominated to become the next president of the European Central BankImage: picture-alliance/AP Photo/M. Elshamy

The 'duopoly' to continue?

The IMF was formally set up in 1945 to help rebuild the international monetary system after World War II. In addition to monetary cooperation and exchange rate stability, the fund works to facilitate global commerce and economic expansion.

The IMF, which is today made up of 189 member countries, has traditionally been led by a Western European official.

Since World War II, as part of an informal arrangement, Europe has always chosen the IMF's managing director and the United States has selected the head of the World Bank.

Read more: Bretton Woods at 75: Has the system reached its limits?

Complaints about the arrangement have grown louder in recent years, particularly from developing and emerging economies, which have called for far-reaching reforms in the governance of these institutions. Many of them have previously called for the IMF head to be chosen on merit rather than nationality.

Still, the United States and Europe have the biggest voting blocs in the IMF, making it difficult for an outside candidate to upset the leadership tradition.

The "duopoly" therefore is expected to continue, particularly after US President Donald Trump's nominee, David Malpass, was approved in April to lead the World Bank with European support.

EU remains split

But EU governments remain split, with northern European countries preferring Dijsselbloem or Rehn, and southern states pushing for Calvino or Centeno, a European official said.

"I have been asked to run for the IMF chief position. After considering this, I have answered I am ready to be nominated. It is a challenging, but really interesting and motivating task," the Helsingin Sanomat newspaper quoted Rehn as saying. He served for a decade as a European commissioner.

France's Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire had said he was aiming for a decision on a European candidate by end-July.

But if no compromise is found by next week, the decision could be made on the sidelines of a G7 leaders' summit August 24-26 in Biarritz, France, the European official said.

sri/jm (Reuters, AFP)

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