Tag Archives: Christine Lagarde

Hungary aims to close IMF office, repay loan early

Hungary is considering paying back early a bailout loan from the International Monetary Fund and also wants to close the organization’s office in Budapest.

National Bank of Hungary President Gyorgy Matolcsy said Monday in a letter addressed to IMF chief Christine Lagarde that while they “appreciate the valuable support” the Washington-based group gave the country, the stand-by credit program “is almost complete.” As such, it was no longer necessary for the IMF to keep an office in Hungary.

In 2008, during a Socialist-led government, Hungary received a rescue credit line of 20 billion euros ($25 billion at the time) from the IMF and other creditors. But Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government chose not to renew the deal in 2010 to avoid closer IMF scrutiny of its economic policies.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Spain extradition hearing for ex-HSBC worker

Spain‘s National Court is holding an extradition hearing for a former bank employee wanted by Switzerland for allegedly stealing confidential information related to thousands of customers with Swiss accounts.

Herve Falciani, a French-Italian citizen, allegedly removed data linked to at least 24,000 customers of HSBC’s Swiss subsidiary, potentially exposing many to prosecution by tax authorities in their home countries. He passed a list of names to French authorities.

France‘s former Finance Minister, Christine Lagarde, now head of the International Monetary Fund, relayed the list to the U.S. and many European Union countries.

Spanish politicians oppose Falciani’s extradition, saying he is helping authorities investigate tax fraud, a touchy issue given Spain‘s recession and sky-high unemployment.

French prosecutor Eric de Montgolfier is due to attend Monday’s hearing as a witness.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/qfzixzNNMLI/

IMF agrees to its part of Cypriot bailout

The International Monetary Fund has agreed to its part of the bailout for Cyprus, saying it will contribute 1 billion euros ($1.28 billion).

The European Union and the IMF this week finalized the details of the bailout, which was agreed on in principle last week. IMF head Christine Lagarde said in a statement issued Wednesday that the fund will provide about a tenth of the overall package of 10 billion euros ($12.8 billion)

EU finance chief Olli Rehn and Lagarde said in a separate, joint statement that “significant challenges lie ahead for Cyprus” as the government there sets in motion a multi-year program of reforms to rebuild its troubled banking sector and to implement deep spending cuts.

Cyprus hopes the first batch of rescue money will arrive next month.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Investigators search Paris home of IMF chief as part of probe into $400M arbitration deal

A lawyer for IMF chief Christine Lagarde says French investigators have searched her Paris home as part of an inquiry into her role in a $400 million arbitration deal in favor of a tycoon.

The lawyer, Yves Repiquet (eev ruh-PEE-kay), says Lagarde has nothing to hide and welcomed Wednesday’s search as another step in proving her innocence.

Lagarde was France‘s finance minister when magnate Bernard Tapie won a 2008 settlement with a state-owned bank over the mishandled sale of Adidas in the 1990s. Critics said the settlement was too generous.

IMF spokesman Gerry Rice said the organization’s executive board had discussed the issue prior to Lagarde’s appointment in June 2011, “and expressed its confidence that Madame Lagarde would be able to effectively carry out her duties as managing director.”

Rice declined further comment, saying it would be inappropriate to say more about a case currently before the French judiciary.

Critics in France have said the Adidas case shouldn’t have gone to a private arbitration authority in the first place because it involved a state-owned bank, Credit Lyonnais, and that Lagarde should have questioned the independence of one of the arbitration panel’s judges.

Questions about the settlement began before Lagarde was appointed head of the Washington-based International Monetary Fund after her predecessor, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, quit to face charges he tried to rape a New York hotel maid. The charges against Strauss-Kahn were dropped.

During Lagarde‘s four-year tenure as France‘s finance minister, she won praise for her role in international negotiations during the global financial crisis and Europe‘s debt troubles.

Given the legal troubles of her IMF predecessor, Strauss-Kahn, Lagarde’s contract says she is “expected to observe the highest standards of ethical conduct” and “shall strive to avoid even the appearance of impropriety in your conduct.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Investigators search Paris home of IMF chief

A lawyer for IMF chief Christine Lagarde says French investigators have searched her Paris home today as part of an inquiry into her role in a $400 million arbitration deal in favor of a tycoon.

The laywer, Yves Repiquet (eev ruh-PEE-kay), says Lagarde has nothing to hide and he welcomed Wednesday’s search as another step in proving her innocence.

Lagarde was France‘s finance minister when magnate Bernard Tapie won a 2008 settlement with a state-owned bank over the mishandled sale of Adidas in the 1990s. Critics said the settlement was too generous.

Questions about the settlement began before Lagarde was appointed head of the Washington-based International Monetary Fund after her predecessor, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, quit to face charges he tried to rape a New York hotel maid. The charges were dropped.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

These 5 Davos Takeaways are Getting Buzz

By Mark Fidelman, Contributor The trouble with the World Economic Forum and its annual conference in Davos Switzerland, is that they do a poor job of summarizing the main trends, conversations and sentiment about its attendees. Instead they rely on the press and individual observers to convey their own individual accounts. More often than not, they are subjects that most of us don’t care about or misrepresent the majority opinion. What a wasted opportunity. Because of that, I turned to KPMG International and their World Economic Forum Live Twitter aggregation and data visualization service to provide us the key trends and insights from the conference’s world leaders, celebrities and CEOs. Here are the top 5 insights: 1. A lack of women (17% of the total) at the conference caused a stir but were able to have their voice heard anyway. Almost 35% of the social media conversations involved women. 2. “Young Global Leaders” #ygl were the subject of many conversations. In fact much was made of the ability for young leaders to connect and work with each other to cause positive change. 3. British Prime Minister David Cameron caused an uproar with his speech on how the European Union must change or the UK may return to an island state. 4. Global economy appears to be in recovery – delegates optimistic. At least that was the sentiment of delegates at the conference. But George Soros was a notable pessimist. 5. Delegates discussed how to adapt to social technologies and finally seem to recognize its importance in world affairs. While the media delegation to Davos averaged three retweets for every tweet they posted (1,936 tweets to 5,629 retweets), ‘Public figures’ averaged 17.5 retweets for every tweet they posted (433 tweets to 7,591 retweets), including Mario Monti (78 retweets, 16 replies), Christine Lagarde (89 retweets, 95 replies) and David Cameron (79 retweets, 47 replies) — demonstrating the power of social media to enable the public and political leaders to engage more directly. David Green, Global Head of Digital Marketing, KPMG International summarized it this way: “this data shows the power of social media to enable the public and political leaders to engage more directly. There is now greatly transparency around, and public engagement with, important events such as Davos. Business and individuals alike have a chance to air their views on the issues that matter, as the discussions happen.” So, yes, Davos delegates are out of the mainstream. But there’s no doubting the importance of the attending leaders and their conversations. These are the business and government kingpins that are making big decisions that impact the rest of us. So it was refreshing to see how active some of these leaders were on Twitter because we could tune in from afar. Indeed, transparency is a good thing. Let’s hope the rest of them get the message.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Fragile economy, other global woes dominated Davos

The fragile state of the world economy, coupled with the relentless turmoil in Syria and the rocky fallout from the Arab Spring, dominated discussions during this year’s annual gathering of the global elite at Davos, leaving many participants uneasy about what lies ahead as they left for home Sunday.

Even broad agreement that there are some positive signs on the economic front, at least in emerging markets, was coupled with a warning from the head of the International Monetary Fund. “Do not relax,” Christine Lagarde said. There’s still a “risk of relapse.”

More than 2,500 of the best and brightest in business, government, academia and civic life gathered for the five-day World Economic Forum at this Alpine resort. But much of the overt glitz and glamor that is a usual feature was toned down or absent this year, a decision founder Klaus Schwab said reflected the serious issues facing the world.

Political and economic issues vie for top billing each year at Davos, and this time, the economy had the edge, with a special focus on how to promote economic growth and jobs, especially for the youth among the world’s 220 million jobless.

The IMF said that China, Africa, and other emerging markets could see significant growth, but Japan, eurozone nations and the U.S. are likely to struggle with negative to low growth. Ahead of the 43rd forum, the IMF downgraded its forecast for global economic growth this year by one-tenth of a percentage point to 3.5 percent.

While the U.S. avoided the so-called “fiscal cliff” of automatic tax increases and spending cuts, and fears have abated that the euro currency union will break up, there is growing concern that governments may ease up on measures to improve growth and reduce debt that the IMF and many other institutions are calling for.

IMF chief Lagarde said the “very fragile and timid recovery” depends on leaders in the 17-nation eurozone, the United States and Japan making “the right decisions.” The eurozone in particular “is fragile because it is prone to political crisis” and slow decision-making, she said.

Davos participants’ uneasiness about the world economy was matched by growing concern over the political turmoil in the Arab world, terrorism in North Africa, a spate of natural disasters that have highlighted the failure to tackle climate change, and the growing inequality between the world’s “haves” and “have nots.”

“Two years ago, gloom around the stalled economic recovery was leavened by euphoria at the outbreak of the Arab spring,” Kenneth Roth, the executive director of Human Rights Watch, told The Associated Press at Saturday night’s low-key final reception. “This year, relief at the improved economic outlook is tempered by despair at the unimpeded slaughter in Syria, uncertainty about the outlook in Egypt, and frustration over the Arab monarchies’ resistance to reform.”

The Arab Spring uprisings have ousted dictators in Tunisia, Yemen, Libya and Egypt over the past two years. But now Islamists and liberals are wrangling over power, with Islamists mainly gaining the upper hand. Democracy is far from certain, and economic woes have left hundreds of thousands of young people jobless and frustrated that their “revolutions” haven’t produced any dividends.

Former Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa, a losing candidate in Egypt‘s presidential election last year, said there have been achievements, but warned that democracy isn’t only about casting a vote.

“It is the respect of human rights, for rights of women, separation of powers, independence of the judiciary. This meaning of democracy we have not yet achieved,” Moussa said.

Elsewhere in the Middle East, Israeli-Palestinian peace talks remain stalled, Arab monarchs remain entrenched, and the death toll from the escalating civil war in Syria has topped 60,000 with no end in sight.

Jordan’s King Abdullah II, whose country is hosting almost 300,000 Syrian refugees, predicted that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime will last at least another six months. He called for a transition plan involving all Syrians and the Syrian army.

He also urged stepped up international support to end the Syrian crisis, saying, “The weakest refugees are struggling now just to survive this year’s harsh winter.”

Abdullah told the forum that “unprecedented threats to regional and global stability and security” need international action now, not the “wait and see” response by some countries — which he did not identify — especially in helping governments emerge politically and financially from the Arab uprisings.

The king, considered one of the region’s moderate leaders, also warned Israel to stop playing the “waiting game,” and said President Barack Obama’s second term offered the last opportunity to create two states — Palestine and Israel — that can live side-by-side in peace.

Angel Gurria, secretary-general of the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, said the focus on resolving the world’s economic crisis has distracted leaders from many other important issues, including education, the social consequences of unemployment and promoting ways to deal with climate change.

Nonetheless, Gurria said, the world should be “very worried” because there aren’t many “tools” left to fix the economy if things get worse.

Trevor Manuel, South Africa’s National Planning Commission minister, told AP that the key message from Davos for him was a positive one — that “many of the decisions that have been taken bring us closer to where we need to be.” He warned that “a sense of an all-pervasive gloom … frequently becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News