Worries over Trump policies cloud start of IMF, World Bank meetings
The International Monetary Fund and World Bank
spring meetings bring the two multilateral institutions' 189 members face-to-face with Trump's "America First" agenda for the first time,
just two blocks from the White House.
World finance leaders are gathering on US President Donald Trump's
home turf on Thursday to try to nudge his still-evolving policies away
from protectionism and show broad support for open trade and global
integration.
The International Monetary Fund and World Bank spring
meetings bring the two multilateral institutions' 189 members
face-to-face with Trump's "America First" agenda for the first time,
just two blocks from the White House.
"These meetings will all be
about Trump and the implications of his policies for the international
agenda," said Domenico Lombardi, a former IMF board official who is now
with the Centre for International Governance Innovation, a Canadian
think-tank.
He added that IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde
is aiming to "socialize" the new administration to the IMF's agenda and
influence its policy choices.
The IMF in particular has sounded
warnings against Trump's plans to shrink U.S. trade deficits with
potential measures to restrict imports, arguing in its latest economic
forecasts that protectionist policies would crimp global growth that is
starting to gain traction.
Trump administration officials are now
pushing back against such warnings by arguing that other countries are
more protectionist than the United States.
Trump launched the week
by signing an executive order to review "Buy American" public
procurement rules that have long offered some exemptions under free
trade agreements, and by lashing out at Canadian dairy restrictions.
In
addition to warnings on trade, the IMF on Wednesday unveiled two
studies pointing out dangers from fiscal proposals that Trump is
considering. These included warnings that his tax reform ideas could
fuel financial risk-taking and raise public debt enough to hurt growth.
Making
tax reforms "in a way that does not increase the deficit is better for
growth," added IMF fiscal affairs director Vitor Gaspar.
The
advice may simply be ignored, especially after U.S. Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin last month insisted that an anti-protectionism pledge be dropped from a Group of 20 communique issued in Baden-Baden, Germany,
said Eswar Prasad, former head of the IMF's China department
"The
IMF has little leverage since its limited toolkit of analysis-based
advice, persuasion, and peer pressure is unlikely to have much of an
impact on this administration's policies," said Prasad, now an
international trade professor at Cornell University.
Mnuchin's decision against naming China a currency manipulator last week removed one concern for the IMF ahead of the meeting.
Lagarde
also noted on Wednesday that the IMF would listen to all of its
members, and work for "free and fair" trade. Lagarde is set to interview
Mnuchin on stage during the meetings
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