- Questioned about Greek crisis head of IMF said country can help itself collectively 'by paying all their tax'
- Suggests that IMF's money would be better spent on African children than on people in Athens
- Lagarde takes home £298,675-a-year untaxed
- Receives further tax-free allowance package of £52,000
Laughing all the way to the bank: IMF managing director Christine Lagarde criticised beleagured Greeks for not paying taxes, while she earns a tax-free salary herself |
The head of
the International Monetary Fund who controversially proposed that struggling
Greeks should pay taxes contributes nothing herself to the public purse.
Christine
Lagarde openly criticised citizens of the ailing EU country in an interview
last week, but it has now emerged that the former French lawyer takes home
every penny of her own £298,675 a year salary.
In addition
the IMF managing director also receives a tax-free allowance package of £52,000
a year.
Ms Lagarde
told the Guardian that she believes children in Niger with little schooling
deserve the fund's money more than people in Athens.
She
continued: 'Do you know what? As far as Athens is concerned, I also think about
all those people who are trying to escape tax all the time.
'All these
people in Greece who are trying to escape tax.'
She added:
'I think they should also help themselves collectively. By all paying their
tax.'
Lagarde
also criticised Greek citizens 'who are trying to escape tax,' and said the
country needs to club together to make more of an effort to solve its economic
problems.
Her
comments came as the IMF increases the pressure on the Eurozone nation and
makes it clear it will not be softening the terms of the nation's austerity
package that is deeply unpopular with the country's electorate.
More...
- The Greeksshould not expect sympathy, says IMF boss Christine Lagarde who is 'moreworried' about schooling in Africa
- The truthis unpalatable, but Christine Lagarde is right to tell Greeks to pay theirtaxes
The former
French finance minister took over from disgraced countryman Dominique
Strauss-Kahn in June last year with strong support including the British, U.S.,
Chinese and German governments and is now a year into her five-year term.
At the time
the former French president Nicolas Sarkozy described her appointment as 'a
victory for France.'
Others were
less impressed however, with Oxfam labeling the decision 'farcical' because of
what it judged to be a lack of transparency in the appointment process.
Imposing: The headquarters of the IMF in Washington is where representatives of 184 countries aim to work together to foster global monetary cooperation and secure financial stability |
Mr
Strauss-Kahn had been forced to step down under a media storm after he was
charged with sexually assaulting a New York hotel maid - the charges were later
dropped.
Lagarde,
56, who began her career at Chicago-based law firm Baker & McKenzie, earns
more than US President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron
who both pay taxes.
Mr Obama
earns around £255,000 a year while Mr Cameron receives a salary of £142,000 for
running the country.
Lagarde's
salary could also go up in a few weeks as her contract entitles her to a pay
rise on July 1 every year.
Lagarde
does not pay tax in line with other international organisations such as the
United Nations where workers are entitled to a similar tax break.
It comes
under article 34 of the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations which
declares that diplomatic agents are 'exempt from all dues and taxes, personal
or real, national, regional or municipal.'
Contributors: Christine Lagarde earns more than both Barack Obama, left, and David Cameron, right |
Annual pay
for UN workers start at between £29,000 to £51,000 with senior salaries range
between £61,000 and £80,000 although this figure varies depending on where an
employee is based.
A UN worker
based in Geneva could expect to see their base salary increased by 106 per cent
while even in Juba, the relatively poor capital of South Sudan, a UN worker
could anticipate a 53.2 per cent top up of their salary.
Additional
perks include rent subsidies and travel expenses, as well as subsidised medical
insurance.
Frustration
at the luxury, tax-free lifestyles of international public service workers is
not a new issue, the argument dates back to the moment the IMF was created at
the Bretton Woods economic conference in 1944.
British
representatives felt salaries put forward by U.S. delegates were huge, but they
were overruled.
The counter
argument suggested by those who work for the organisation is that the whopping
salaries are required to attract the best people from the well paid private
sector.
However,
studies have found that in fact most senior employees are already working in
government positions.
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