More

U.S. Worried IMF Loans To Europe Could Lead To Losses

Imf

First Posted: 12/10/11 11:49 AM ET Updated: 12/10/11 11:49 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton) - The prospect of European heavyweights like Italy or Spain turning to the IMF for rescue loans is worrying the United States and other nations that fear they could suffer losses on funds they have extended to the IMF.

The International Monetary Fund cannot be expected to step in as a substitute for a stronger commitment by Europe which needs to assume the brunt of any losses on emergency loans, a senior US official said on Friday.

Despite the International Monetary Fund's stable record - no borrower has ever defaulted on an IMF loan and no country has ever lost money lending to the IMF - there are concerns about the IMF's growing exposure to the euro zone.

That exposure could take a quantum leap if Italy and Spain need bailouts, a level of assistance that would almost certainly dwarf the loans already approved for Greece, Ireland and Portugal in deals engineered with the European Union.

Emerging markets, which are contemplating lending more money to the IMF -- which couples monetary assistance with tough conditions that seek to ensure a country does not default -- have also raised concerns in the IMF about the risks to the fund's capital, officials from emerging nations told Reuters.

A crucial European Union summit ended on Friday with a historic agreement to draft a new treaty for deeper integration in the euro zone in an effort to rein in a debt crisis that started in Greece two years ago and has continued to spread.

Worries about the IMF's risk are also brewing among congressional lawmakers.

Four U.S. lawmakers who met with IMF chief Christine Lagarde this week expressed unease over the risk the fund would take on with a bigger role in Europe.

A request for a big IMF loan for Italy or Spain would put the United States, which holds veto power over most IMF lending decisions, in an uncomfortable spot.

The American public is still stung by the U.S. government's big bailouts for banks during the 2007-09 financial crisis and fears that mounting U.S. debts imperil the nation's future.

With President Barack Obama facing a tough battle for re-election in November, the White House is not keen to appear as Europe's savior, and the administration's message to Europe has consistently been: Put more of your own money on the line.

Indeed, Republican lawmakers are seeking to yank a $108 billion loan the United States approved for the IMF in 2009, a move that would undercut Washington's ability to influence the conditions attached to IMF loans.

"If the United States wants to help Europe find a way out of its current debt crisis, we must be a strong, world economic leader, not merely the lender of last resort," Republican Senator Jim DeMint wrote in The Wall Street Journal on Friday.

"Members of the Obama administration must focus all of their efforts on strengthening the U.S. economy and balancing our budget, rather than on continuing to borrow from China to pay for Europe's out-of-control debts," he added.

DeMint said he would seek to force another vote to stop U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner from supporting more European bailouts. The Senate voted 55-44 in June against a proposal by DeMint to repeal IMF loan authority.

Domenico Lombardi, a former IMF board official now at the Brookings Institution in Washington, said even if the U.S. Congress rescinded the loan, it would not prevent the IMF from lending to Europe. He said the international community has a stake in ensuring the euro zone crisis does not spread further.

PREFERRED CREDITOR

The IMF enjoys an understanding among its members that borrowing nations will always pay the IMF back ahead of private creditors.

However, the scale of borrowing troubled euro zone countries might need raises the specter that one of the nation's could default on an IMF loan.

The IMF has about $380 billion available for lending, a figure outstripped by Italy and Spain's debt refinancing needs. Italy needs to roll over 340 billion euros (290.5 billion pounds) in debt next year, while Spain needs to refinance 120 billion euros.

"The problem with some of these countries now is you're getting to a point where (debt) is large enough that defaulting on the IMF is attractive enough if you want to reduce your debt," said Raghuram Rajan, a former IMF chief economist now at the University of Chicago's Booth School.

"I'm not saying the euro area will act at cross purposes with the fund. But when it comes to writing down the debt, will the euro area respect the (preferred) status of the IMF?"

European leaders agreed at a summit on Friday to provide 150 billion euros in bilateral loans to the IMF to tackle the crisis, with another 50 billion euros coming from non-European countries.

National central banks in the euro zone would pump the capital into the IMF. The funds would not count as a contribution toward Europe's IMF quotas, which determine its voting power in the fund.

WHOSE MONEY IS THIS ANYWAY?

There are two ways of channeling the money to the IMF, either through the fund's general resources or a so-called IMF-administered account.

Any lending from the IMF's general resources would spread the risk across the entire IMF membership. In an administered account, the countries contributing would take the losses in the case of default.

Thus far, Europe has indicated it is legally easier for its funds to be part of general resources.

When it comes to additional resources to battle the euro zone debt crisis, the United States prefers the second option, which would put most of the risk on Europe and none on the United States. The Obama administration has argued for months that Europe needs to put more capital on the line.

"The key point is that official funding must also bear losses if necessary," Rajan wrote in a recent column. "Consequently, if support is channeled through the IMF, the fund will need a guarantee from the euro zone that it will be indemnified in case of a (debt) restructuring."

Mario Blejer, a former Argentine central bank governor, argues that Europe should take care of its own and bear the full risk of any default.

"The IMF's seniority is an unwritten principle, sustained in a delicate equilibrium, and high-volume lending is testing the limit," Blejer and Eduardo Levy Yeyati, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, wrote recently.

"From this perspective, the proposal to use the IMF as a conduit for ECB resources -- thereby circumventing restrictions imposed by European Union's treaties -- while providing the ECB with preferred-creditor status, would exacerbate the Fund's exposure to risky borrowers," Blejer and Yeyati said.

"This arrangement could be seen as an unwarranted abuse of Fund seniority that, in addition, unfairly frees the ECB from the need to impose its own conditionality on one of its members."

($1 = 0.7482 euros)

(Editing by Tim Ahmann, Leslie Adler and Andrew Hay)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BUSINESS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Money newsletter!
WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton) - The prospect of European heavyweights like Italy or Spain turning to the IMF for rescue loans is worrying the United States and other nations that fear they could s...
WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton) - The prospect of European heavyweights like Italy or Spain turning to the IMF for rescue loans is worrying the United States and other nations that fear they could s...
Filed by Maxwell Strachan  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 382
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (9 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RobinHewitt
01:47 PM on 12/14/2011
The Eurozone has enough resources to solve their financial problems without IMF help. They just don't choose to do so. They have two self-service choices: 1) Terminate the euro (for that they need enough capital -- several trillion euros -- to shore up their insolvent banks) or 2) Permanent cash flows from the wealthier nations such as Germany to the insolvent nations such as Greece. Both would hurt the wealthier nations but you know what? Tough. That's the consequences of choices those wealthy nations made when they pushed and pushed to form the Eurozone. No way should the IMF be bailing out an entity that is not -- as a whole -- insolvent. It's called taking personal responsibility.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerald4
licensed mechanical and electrical engineer
10:33 AM on 12/12/2011
Most all of these European Nations do not have any intention of honoring their commitments to repay their Bonds that they sold to people and then spent that money on their government expenses.

If the US Treasury bought any of these worthless bonds, then the bureaucrats that did that were probably taking bribes to have the US federal government purchase these Worthless European Nation Issued bonds. If that was true, then those bureaucrats need to be tried and if found guilty hanged by the neck until dead.

Bribes are not always cash in a brown paper sack. These days insider trading advice is much less obvious and harder to detect instead of cash payments.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerald4
licensed mechanical and electrical engineer
10:31 AM on 12/12/2011
European and US citizens apparently believe that we are entitled to sit idle and not work in some dirty factory making the things that we consume, when our governments can borrow money and obligate our children and unborn grandchildren to work and pay off our printed paper Treasury Bond debts that we accumulate while we continue our easy non-productive lifestyle.

This current situation of using borrowed money for (unlimited) government expenses might end for the USA when the USA runs out of privately owned US property and other assets that foreigners will accept in return for the US dollars that US citizens paid to those foreign workers in foreign factories to make the things that US citizens purchased and consumed.

Many countries are losing confidence in the dollar as the benchmark for world trade and currency values.

Other currencies, like the Chinese Yuan with a more stable value because they are redeemable for real wealth and commodities, are now being talked about as a replacement for the US Dollar as the benchmark for international currency values.

The Chinese Yuan might be the LAST MAN (currency) STANDING after the big deficit spending European and US government policies with their non-producing citizens destroy the value of the US Dollar and the Euro.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
authorized-user
No right way to do a wrong thing
08:52 AM on 12/12/2011
Great picture;

How do you say in French; "the itsy bitsy spider went up the water spout?"

That pretty much sums up the euro deal.
08:57 PM on 12/11/2011
What is the asset to debt ratio of the major world governments and their banks? In other words, what is their Net Worths? With all the never to be paid consumer loans floating aroung just in the United States, I'll bet the world is in terrible financial trouble. Maybe there are just too many Kudlows giving financial advice.

http://www.newamerica14.com
photo
wolfml1
making sense out of a senseless world
07:06 PM on 12/11/2011
Throwing good money after bad.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
05:35 PM on 12/11/2011
So, with Germany and the IMF propping up Europe's economy, and President Obama is facing a tough battle for re-election in November tells Europe " Put more of your own money on the line", what New Math course has our President taken? What money?

OUR MONEY is in the IMF. We're still in a recession and now, but Obama is going to bail out our banks and then start propping up Germany and other European economies dead in the water? If the American people ever get wind of this, Nutty Newt is your next president.
photo
drbob601
Soylent Green is People
04:35 PM on 12/11/2011
I suspect it's not just U.S. oficials that will be "worrying" about the IMF and its role in the Eurozone crisis.

"Poland Needs to Spend 30% of Total Budget on IMF Bailouts to EU as Result of Merkozy Summit"

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/12/poland-needs-to-spend-30-of-total.html

"Quite frankly it is idiotic to even think about giving 30% of a nation's budget to the IMF. "
01:56 PM on 12/11/2011
New age of reconstruction: Start with financial De-construction!
Like a scientist trying to Reverse engineer a new foriegn machine, the class based societies are becomming too educated for the system to withstand much more. Abuses that result in inconveniences and suffering to our citizens must be punishable by law. Too many leaders in business manipulate the system and convert praisworthy endeavors into debacals of fiscally distructive, avalanches of governments and nations.
The results are banging at our doors now! Do we wait till the doors cave in or what?
photo
The Dude67
This is not Nam; this is bowling, there are rules.
12:50 PM on 12/11/2011
Money chasing will be the meteor that takes out the human dinosaur.  "Money" is nothing but a contrived human system of control.  The "real" game is fought over resources both human and material.  

As humans become more 'educated' the system of money must in proportion become increasingly complex to hide the inequities built into the system.  A paradox has developed in which the people who understand how unfair the system is are so entrenched in it they either obtusely defend it or shrug it off as "the way it is."  

Case in point, someone that makes their living in financial services or banking will likely attack this post and accuse me of being ignorant.  I asked my brother-in-law who is a CFO in the pharmaceutical industry about the practice of fractional reserve banking - specifically whether it was 'ethical' since bankers essentially invent money to lend.  His response: "Well it's no problem so long as they hold the proper reserves".   I doubt he (or most people) understand the inherent inequity in fractional reserve banking. 

Henry Ford once quipped: "If the public understood our financial system there would be a revolution by tomorrow morning".  This remains true to this day.

I would encourage everyone to spend time researching the history of banking and money.  Particularly how religion shaped our modern system and the concept of "reserve" banking.   Peace.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pepper1311
POGS are dirt
12:14 PM on 12/11/2011
Are big five banks are holding 28.7 trillion in cash.
11:37 AM on 12/11/2011
Europe just agreed to limit any household deficit to 3% or less.
The US household deficit is 35%. Congress completely inept to deal with it.
And Senator DeMented talks about the US as a strong lender. Delusions of grandeur.
11:21 AM on 12/11/2011
My question is, how long before the countries of the world join up to reconstruct the entire world financial system? Look at Greece and then Italy for a vision of what exactly the financiers are going to do to every country on the planet. Our leaders are either complicit it these actions or they are dolts. It's time the police went into these hellholes that cause all of the trouble and clean them out. We bailed them out and we have every premiss to protect our citizenry from their machinations.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pennsanic
Be nice to the US or we'll bring you democracy too
12:01 PM on 12/11/2011
Who will protect their citizenry from America's machinations?
11:13 AM on 12/11/2011
Borrow and spend forever. Who knew it could not work? Looks so good on paper.
11:08 AM on 12/11/2011
Caption: After we hand over the taxpayer money we give them a hug and a kiss.