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Lagarde set for IMF top job

Last Updated 04 May 2018, 02:19 IST

Lagarde, 55, should easily get the majority support of the IMF’s board over Mexico’s central bank governor, Agustin Carstens, to become the first woman to head the institution.
While Carstens will get the backing of Latin America, Canada and Australia, his support appears too thin to break Europe’s 64-year hold on the IMF post.

The 24-strong IMF board will soon meet to finalise a process that began in May after Dominique Strauss-Kahn resigned as IMF managing director to defend himself against charges of sexual assault and attempted rape. He denies the charges.

IMF board directors, who represent the fund’s 187 member countries, want to try to reach a consensus decision on a successor that would allow them to avoid a formal vote. It is possible the process could spill into Wednesday.

The race has been one of the most hotly contested succession battles in IMF history.
In a convention dating back to the creation of the IMF and World Bank after World War Two, Europe has always held the top IMF job, while the World Bank’s top post has always gone to an American.

Developing countries have warned against another US-European stitch-up, but some potential candidates from emerging markets decided not to step up because they did not feel they had a fair chance at the job.

Although a long-shot candidate, Carstens vigorously campaigned on his experience as a former IMF official who had first-hand knowledge of developing world economic crises. An important voice in the discussion will be the United States, which has been silent on who it supports.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the selection proceed had produced “two very credible candidates” but he has also stressed the need for a quick resolution to the decision. However, the Obama administration is widely expected to back Lagarde.

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(Published 28 June 2011, 17:32 IST)

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