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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is in eclipse as the
preeminent institution promoting international economic and
financial stability. Successful reform of the IMF must engage the
full spectrum of its members. The IMF should not focus primarily on
its low-income members and the challenges of global poverty nor
should it focus exclusively on international financial crises
affecting a small group of vulnerable emerging-market economies.
Instead, it must be engaged with each of its members potentially on
the full range of their economic and financial policies and play a
central role in shaping global economic performance. This important
new book strongly argues that systemically important countries,
starting with the Group of Seven, must support the IMF in this
role. Its recommendations cover all key aspects of IMF
responsibilities and operations: (1) In the crucial area of
governance, the membership of the IMF should promptly address the
reallocation of IMF shares (voting power) and the reallocation of
chairs (representation on the IMF executive board), and it is time
to discard the old conventions and to adopt a merit-based approach
to the choice of the IMF's leadership; (2) mechanisms should be put
in place to increase the IMF's leverage over systemically important
members, and the IMF must act more forcefully in discharging its
responsibility to exercise firm surveillance over members? exchange
rate policies; (3) the Fund's central role in external financial
crises should be reaffirmed; (4) the IMF should narrow and refocus
its involvement with its low-income members; (5) the IMF's
activities should be updated with respect to members? capital
account policies and financialsectors; and (6) the IMF should put
in place procedures for borrowing from the market to guard against
the possibility that it will not receive timely increases in its
quota resources.
Originally developed to reduce drug trafficking, national and
international efforts to stymie money laundering have broadened
over the years to address other crimes and, most recently,
terrorism. These efforts now constitute a formidable regime applied
to financial institutions and transactions throughout much of the
world. Yet few assessments of either the achievements or
consequences of this regime have been made. Reuter and Truman (1)
explore what is known about the scale and characteristics of money
laundering, (2) describe the current anti-money laundering regime,
(3) develop a framework for assessing the effectiveness of the
regime, (4) use that framework to assess how well the current
system works and (5) make proposals for its improvement.
Based on a conference held in September 2005 on the future of the
International Monetary Fund, this important new book includes an
overview of the challenges facing the IMF today. In addition the
book will look at four areas: the international monetary system and
the IMF (with an emphasis on enforcing and reforming the rules),
governance (including representation), fi nancial resources (the
need for additional resources and how they should be supplied), and
fi nancing from the fund (including the role of IMF fi nancing and
the need for new facilities). Includes chapters by IMF managing
director, Rodrigo deRato; Timothy D. Adams, the undersecretary for
international affairs at the US Treasury Department; Kemal Dervi?,
the head of the United Nations Development Program, the United
Nation's Global Development Network; and John B. Taylor, former
undersecretary for international affairs at the US Treasury
Department.
This study examines the role of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) in
the global economy and financial system. Sovereign wealth funds are
not a new phenomenon in international finance. Governments of a few
countries have used similar entities to manage their international
financial assets for several decades. Moreover, countries have
always held international reserves, and government-owned entities
have made cross-border investments for many years.Sovereign wealth
funds or their equivalent pose profound issues for the countries
that own them with respect to macroeconomic policy and the
potential for corruption. They also raise issues for countries that
receive SWF investments as well as for the international financial
system as a whole because government ownership introduces potential
political and economic power issues into the management of these
cross-border assets. This study traces the origins of SWFs. It
describes the issues raised by these large governmental holdings of
cross-border assets for the countries that own them, for the host
countries, and for the international financial system. The study
lays out what is known about the 50-plus SWFs of various countries.
Some countries have more than one such entity, and a sample of
government-managed pension funds is included in this analysis
because they raise most of the same basic policy issues.Using
publicly available information that is provided on a systematic
basis, the author has previously developed a "scoreboard" for these
funds involving a number of elements grouped in four categories:
structure, governance, transparency and accountability, and
behavioral rules. The 2008 edition contributed to the development
of a set of generally accepted principles and practices, the
Santiago Principles, for SWFs by the International Working Group
operating under the auspices of the International Monetary Fund.
This publication presents an updated scoreboard for an expanded
list of funds, evaluates the Santiago Principles, and examines
current compliance with those principles. The study also examines
the policies of recipient countries and the role of the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
investment codes. Finally, the study discusses the evolving role of
SWFs in the context of the global economic and financial crisis and
its aftermath and will make recommendations for the policies of
countries both managing such funds and those that expect to receive
investments from them in the future.
This study reviews the literature on the contribution of low
inflation to economic growth and the subsequent widespread adoption
of inflation targeting as a monetary policy framework. Edwin Truman
addresses the challenges and risks associated with such a
framework. Building on these foundations, the study focuses on two
major international economic policy issues: (1) the implications of
differing national regimes of inflation targeting for international
economic policy cooperation; and (2) the adoption of inflation
targeting by emerging-market economies which often lack stable
monetary policy environments and credible policy authorities-a
situation which, among other things, can complicate the use of the
inflation targeting framework as the basis for IMF-supported
stabilization programs.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ The Truman Collections: Catalogue Of The Collection Of The
Works Of George Cruikshank, The Property Of The Late Edwin Truman
...; Catalogues Of Sales; Wilkinson & Hodge Sotheby Edwin
Truman, Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge Sotheby, Wilkinson &
Hodge, 1906
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