Sunday, April 22, 2007
US, EU need to cede power at IMF, World Bank: report
WASHINGTON: The United States and the European Union need to bow
to global economic reality and for their own good give up their leadership
monopolies at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, a non-partisan
US policy group said on Friday in a report.
“What the US and the EU really need to do, in a major way, is to recognize the
shift of economic power, of energy power, of GDP power to Asia and Latin America
and the emerging economies,” former US Deputy Treasury Secretary Stuart
Eizenstat told reporters, outlining the report from the Atlantic Council of the
United States.
Eizenstat, who served in the Democratic administration of former President Bill
Clinton, and Grant Aldonas, a former commerce undersecretary in President George
W Bush’s Republican administration, co-chaired the Atlantic Council commission
that produced the report.
It looks at how to reinvigorate US and EU leadership in response to the rise of
China and other economic powers in the developing world. It comes as the United
States prepares to host EU leaders at an annual summit on April 30.
“The world is passing us by every day and we don’t realize it. We still think
we’re the dominant powers and we are to a point. But the world is shifting,”
Eizenstat said.
The United States and EU need to shift and make global institutions like the IMF
and the World Bank more representative of their broader membership, Eizenstat
said.
“If the Europeans and the US don’t do this, we’re going to forfeit our world
economic leadership” as other countries grow increasingly frustrated with
current multilateral institutions and create regional rivals, he said.
The call for change at the sister institutions come as the IMF’s membership
weighs changes to its voting system to give developing countries more say in its
policies.
The Atlantic Council report recommends the EU and the United States give up
their longstanding monopoly on appointing the heads of the IMF and World Bank,
respectively.
That recommendation is without reference to current demands for World Bank
President Paul Wolfowitz to resign over his handling of a promotion for his
girlfriend, both Eizenstat and Aldonas said.
The United States and the EU should convene a meeting of major and emerging
economic powers to chart the future of the World Bank and IMF, with a goal of
merging the two institutions by 2030, the report said.
The report also calls for the United States and EU negotiate a series of
investment and trade agreements leading to a barrier-free trans-Atlantic
marketplace.
It urges completion of the Doha round of world trade talks, but says future
negotiations need to shift to a more flexible format because of the difficulty
of getting 150 World Trade Organization members to reach agreement. “We’re
basically saying the era of the multilateral round is over after Doha,”
Eizenstat said. reuters