Friday, September 1, 2006
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund has agreed on a proposal to increase the quotas of China, South Korea, Mexico, and Turkey, the IMF Managing Director Rodrigo de Rato announced. The increases are part of a program of reforms for the organisation, addressing its governance and its macroeconomic monitoring process. The proposals need final approval at the annual meeting scheduled later this month.
Speaking at a press briefing in Washington DC on August 31, Mr. de Rato spoke on the current state of the global economy and outlined the reforms, which include a two-phase reshaping of the quota shares – the proposed increases announced today followed by the development for a new formula to come up with increases for a broader range of members.
Contents
- 1 Global economy
- 1.1 Asia: Current status and prospects
- 1.1.1 India
- 1.1.2 China
- 1.1 Asia: Current status and prospects
- 2 Institutional reforms
- 2.1 Governance
- 2.2 Economic monitoring and analysis
- 3 The IMF
- 4 Related news
- 5 Sources
- 6 External links