Wednesday, March 25, 2015

IMF, World Bank throw weight behind China-led bank


This Chess game is getting interesting..
lobal institutions, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, have endorsed a China-led international bank, despite opposition from the U.S.
Related Stories
Why Europe is breaking ranks with US on China bank CNBC
IMF happy to cooperate with China on AIIB - Lagarde Reuters
U.S. proposes cooperation between new China-led bank and Western institutions - WSJ Reuters
China says new bank to complement existing institutions Associated Press
Beijing "would welcome" U.S. joining China-led bank - report Reuters
"We are comfortable with the idea of a bank that puts together finance for infrastructure, because our view is that there is a huge need for infrastructure in emerging markets countries," David Lipton, the first deputy managing director of the IMF, told CNBC early on Monday.
Read More The IMF: CNBC Explains
The $50-billion Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) is being established to meet the need for greater infrastructure investment in lower- and middle-income Asian countries. It comes amid complaints by China and other major emerging economies that they lack influence in institutions such as the IMF, the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank.
Support for the AIIB has gathered speed in Europe this month, with the U.K. the first country to sign up, followed by Germany, France and Italy and then Luxembourg and Switzerland.
Related Quotes
However, Washington has expressed misgivings, officially because of concerns about standards of governance and environmental and societal safeguards. Unofficially, the country's is thought to be worried about sacrificing its clout in Asia to China, as well as piqued by criticism of slow reforms in the IMF and World Bank.
"China is now the leader of the world," Sri Mulyani Indrawati, managing director of the World Bank, told CNBC on Sunday in Beijing.
"They (Chinese leaders) try to show that they have sound principles in not only presenting a development solution, but also in establishing this new institution and that is why many of the countries now are becoming members of this institution."
Jim McCaughan, CEO of Principal Global Investors, said that China's move was part of a bid to establish theyuan (Exchange: CNY=) as a global currency-and that the U.S. might be more positive towards the AIIB then its official statements suggested.
"I think Washington will collaborate; I do not think it will officially join, but I think they will collaborate, at least behind the scenes," McCaughan told CNBC early on Monday, adding that the bank was part of a "bigger picture."
"Ultimately, Chinese economic policymakers, I believe, are pushing towards the idea of the renminbi as a reserve currency... this is one small step in that direction, having a multilateral institution that they can lead," McCaughan said.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/imf-world-bank-throw-weight-130805087.html

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

And what was it that the IMF and World Bank were doing extremely successfully for many a decade before contemplating their move to join the BRICS-Far East-Asia economic alliance? Does a leopard change its spots that easily by denying its inherent character ? So why, how and where did the stars n stripes feline hybrids originate? Imagine a Russian bear-stars n stripes feline bankster something hybrid.