Eric BARADAT Outgoing IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde gives an exclusive interview to AFP journalists at the IMF headquarters in Washington on September 19, 2019 |
Accustomed to being the first woman in influential leadership positions and speaking frankly to men in power, Christine Lagarde says manmade threfinats to the global economy can be "man-fixed."
Lagarde
only last week left her post as head of the International Monetary Fund after
eight years, the first woman to serve in that role, and she is expected to put
another "first" on her resume by the end of the year: first woman to
serve as president of the European Central Bank.
She sees a world economy where growth is "fragile" and "under threat" from trade frictions and Brexit, and perhaps an over-reliance on the efforts of central banks like the ECB.
Eric BARADAT Christine Lagarde is expected to take over leadership of the European Central bank and calls for policymakers to address manmade threats to global growth |
She sees a world economy where growth is "fragile" and "under threat" from trade frictions and Brexit, and perhaps an over-reliance on the efforts of central banks like the ECB.
But while
she tried to urge action during her time at the IMF -- she took over in 2011 in
the aftermath of the global financial crisis -- she said a central bank should
"stick to its mandate," which perhaps is a clue to how she will run
the ECB.
Or perhaps
not.
She
carefully avoided a commitment about how she would use her influence in the new
post.
Manmade
problems can be 'man-fixed'
In perfect
English and always engaging and crisply professional, Lagarde sat down with AFP
on Thursday to review her legacy at the Washington-based crisis lender, where
she arrived after being the first woman finance minister of France.
In bare
numbers, her record is impressive: the IMF helped to avoid a global depression,
90 countries -- nearly half of its members -- benefitted from some form of
lending or credit line during the crisis, and the lending capacity was doubled
to $1 trillion.
One of her
main regrets is that she ran out of time to convince the member governments to
increase those resources further, since the IMF, which sits "right at the
core, at the center of the global financial safety net," may not have
enough cash to address the next inevitable crisis.
Still, the
IMF remains influential over economic and financial policy matters.
"I
think we have spoken truth to power, not always to the power's pleasure,"
Lagarde said.
But as she
leaves Britain is poised to crash out of the European Union, with no deal to
cushion the blow in place as yet, while "America First" President
Donald Trump has waged a multi-front trade war primarily targeted at China.
Those
threats have undercut confidences and business investment as well as exports,
and global growth could by some estimates fall to the slowest pace since 2008
at the start of the financial crisis.
But Brexit
and trade frictions "are manmade and can be man-fixed," and Lagarde
quipped, "A bit of woman wouldn't hurt."
Where are
the roof fixers?
She has
often urged governments to "fix the roof while the sun is shining,"
borrowing from former US President John F Kennedy, pushing for spending while
times are good to fix long-term problems and help people left behind by
globalization and technological change.
Yet even
amid a worldwide wave of anger against trade and globalization, officials who
control the purse strings of governments have not done enough, Lagarde said.
Instead
central banks have done much of the heavy lifting in preventing the financial
crisis from becoming a depression.
"I
think central bankers have done an awful lot and were for many years regarded
as the only game in town," she said.
If
confirmed, Lagarde will step into her new post as one of those central bankers
in an environment where Trump has maintained a relentless campaign against the
US Federal Reserve for not cutting interest rates aggressively to stimulate
growth, while others in Europe have criticized outgoing ECB President Mario
Draghi for cutting rates further into negative territory to juice a sluggish EU
economy.
Experience
shows that when politicians meddle with central bank independence it
"doesn't pan out very well," she cautioned, but at the same time
"a central bank has to do the job that it is assigned to do... they should
stick to facts and data so that they could be predictable."
In her new
post leading the ECB, she pledged to focus on job creation and stability, but
stability alone may not be enough in the lives of real people.
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