The FINANCIAL — The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will focus in the months ahead on assisting its member countries to move from stabilization to growth, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde stated in the IMF’s bi-annual work program, according to IMF.
The program was considered by the IMF’s Executive Board on November 25, 2013 and builds on the October 2013 IMFC Communiqué and Global Policy Agenda (GPA), which identified a range of actions needed to break the cycle of subdued growth and recurrent market jitters that has characterized the global recovery to date.
“The global recovery has been uneven and more subdued than hoped. Moving from stabilization to strong, sustainable, balanced and inclusive growth remains a work in progress and requires more ambitious policy implementation. The IMF will assist its members in delivering on this task, including through assessments and policy advice provided in the context of bilateral and multilateral surveillance, as well as capacity building and financial support,” Ms. Lagarde told the Executive Board in presenting the work program.
To achieve this objective, the IMF will focus its analysis for advanced economies on the appropriate macroeconomic policy mix to support the recovery, including growth-friendly fiscal consolidation and the sequencing and impact of the eventual normalization of unconventional monetary policy. The IMF will also continue to help countries address legacy issues from the global crisis and discuss reforms to stimulate job creation. The Fund will assist emerging market economies in strengthening their resilience to spillovers from the global transition to more normal financial conditions, and will examine the trajectory of potential growth in these economies to continue to identify reforms that could support strong growth in the future, according to IMF.
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