The International Monetary Fund's (IMF) executive board agreed
on Thursday to a reform of its governance and quotas, giving
up-and-coming developing countries greater power in the running of
the fund.
"This two-year program of reforms will include initial ad hoc
quota increases for four countries that are clearly
under-represented China, South Korea, Mexico and Turkey," IMF
Managing Director Rodrigo de Rato told a news conference.
"This will now be sent to the Board of Governors for their
approval at Singapore," he said. The IMF and World Bank will hold
their annual meetings on September 19-20 in Singapore.
The fund's quotas determine voting power and have a bearing on
the amount members can borrow.
At present, Rato said, the quotas and voting shares of members
do not adequately reflect the increasing global economic weight of
major emerging market economies.
He said Asia is a prime example, accounting for about a quarter
of the world's gross domestic product one-third higher than its
share of fund quotas.
"The situation of some individual countries is even more out of
line," Rato said. "China's gross domestic product (GDP) is one and
a half times its share of fund quotas. South Korea's share in world
GDP is twice its share in fund quotas."
"I therefore see a clear need for a rebalancing of quotas to
reflect changed economic realities."
There will be a further ad hoc increase in quotas for a broader
range of members, he said.
Issues to be discussed at the Singapore meeting include
proposals for reform of the fund's governance structure and changes
to the way it conducts macroeconomic surveillance, a core function
of the institution, according to Rato.
(China Daily September 2, 2006)