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Christine Lagarde At Davos 2012: 'I Am Here With My Little Bag, To Collect A Bit Of Money'

Christine Lagarde

PAN PYLAS   01/28/12 12:41 PM ET  AP

DAVOS, Switzerland — The head of the International Monetary Fund appeared to be making headway Saturday in her drive to boost the institution's financial firepower so that it can help Europe prevent its crippling debt crisis from further damaging the global economy.

Christine Lagarde, who replaced Dominique Strauss-Kahn as managing director of the fund six months ago, is trying to ramp up the IMF's resources by $500 billion so it can help if more lending is needed in Europe or elsewhere. The IMF is the world's traditional lender-of-last-resort and has been involved in the bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

Insisting that the IMF is a "safe bet" and that no country had ever lost money by lending to the IMF, Lagarde argued that increasing the size of the IMF's resources would help improve confidence in the global financial system. If enough money is in the fund the markets will be reassured and it won't be used, she said, using arguments similar to those that France has made about increasing Europe's own rescue fund.

"It's for that reason that I am here, with my little bag, to actually collect a bit of money," she said at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss Alps town of Davos.

Her plea appeared to find a measure of support from ministers of Britain and Japan, sizable IMF shareholders that would be expected to contribute to any money-raising exercise.

George Osborne, Britain's finance minister, said there is "a case for increasing IMF resources and ... demonstrating that the world wants to help together to solve the world's problems," provided the 17 countries that use the euro show the "color of their money."

European countries have said they're prepared to give the IMF $150 billion, meaning that the rest of the world will have to contribute $350 billion. However, many countries, such as Britain and the U.S., want Europe to do more, notably by boosting its own rescue fund.

Osborne said he would be willing to argue in Parliament for a new British contribution, though he may encounter opposition from some members from his own Conservative Party.

Japan's economy minister, Motohisa Furukawa, said his country would help the eurozone via the IMF, too, even though Japan's own debt burden is massive. Unlike Europe's debt-ridden economies, Japan doesn't face sky-high borrowing rates, partly because there's a very liquid domestic market that continues to support the country's bonds.

Europe once again dominated discussions on the final full day of the forum in Davos. Despite some optimism about Europe's latest attempts to stem the crisis, fears remain that turmoil could return.

Whether the markets remain stable could rest for now on if Greece, the epicenter of the crisis, manages to conclude crucial debt-reduction discussions with its private creditors. It's also seeking to placate demands from its European partners and the IMF for deeper reforms.

A failure on either front could force the country, which is now in its fifth year of recession, to default on its debt and leave the euro, potentially triggering another wave of mayhem in financial markets that could hit the global economy hard.

One German official even said Saturday that Greece should temporarily cede sovereignty over tax and spending decisions to a powerful eurozone budget commissioner to secure further bailouts. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because talks on the idea are confidential.

"The fact that we're still, at the start of 2012, talking about Greece again is a sign that this problem has not been dealt with," Britain's Osborne said.

For Donald Tsang, the chief executive of Hong Kong, efforts to deal with the 2-year-old debt crisis have fallen short of what is required. The failure to properly deal with the Greek situation quickly has meant the ultimate cost to Europe has been higher, he said.

"I have never been as scared as now about the world," he said.

Most economic forecasters predict that the global economy will continue to grow this year, but at a fairly slow rate. The IMF recently reduced its forecasts for global growth in 2012 to 3.3 percent, from the 4 percent pace that the IMF projected in September.

Lagarde sought to encourage some countries that use the euro to boost growth to help shore up the ailing eurozone economy, which is widely expected to sink back into recession, adding that it would be counterproductive if all euro countries cut their budgets aggressively at the same time.

"Some countries have to go full-speed ahead to do this fiscal consolidation ... but other countries have space and room," Lagarde said.

Though conceding that there aren't many such countries, Lagarde said it is important that those that have the headroom explore how they can boost growth. She carefully avoided naming any countries, but likely had in mind Germany, Europe's largest economy and a major world exporter. She didn't specify how to boost growth or how one eurozone country could help others grow.

Lagarde said members of the eurozone should continue the drive to tie their economies closer together. On Monday, European leaders gather in Brussels in the hopes of agreeing on a treaty that will force member countries to put deficit limits into their national laws.

Britain's Osborne said eurozone leaders should be praised for the "courage" they have shown over the past few months in enacting austerity and setting in place closer fiscal ties, but said more will have to be done if the single currency is to get on a surer footing.

Fiscal transfers from rich economies to poorer ones will become a "permanent feature" of the eurozone, Osborne predicted.

While politicians and business people were discussing the state of the global economy within the confines of the conference center, protesters questioned the purpose of the event as income inequalities grow worldwide.

Protesters from the Occupy movement that started on Wall Street have camped out in igloos at Davos and were demonstrating in front of City Hall to call attention to the needs of the poor and unemployed.

In a separate protest, three Ukrainian women were arrested when they stripped off their tops – despite temperatures around freezing – and tried to climb a fence surrounding the invitation-only gathering of international CEOs and political leaders.

"Crisis! Made in Davos," read one message painted across a protester's torso.

Davos police spokesman Thomas Hobi said the three women were taken to the police station and told they weren't allowed to demonstrate. He said they would be released later in the day.

___

Frank Jordans and Edith M. Lederer in Davos, and Juergen Baetz in Berlin contributed to this report.

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DAVOS, Switzerland — The head of the International Monetary Fund appeared to be making headway Saturday in her drive to boost the institution's financial firepower so that it can help Europe pre...
DAVOS, Switzerland — The head of the International Monetary Fund appeared to be making headway Saturday in her drive to boost the institution's financial firepower so that it can help Europe pre...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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12:44 PM on 02/21/2012
IMF = BS
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gemini68
04:10 PM on 01/30/2012
Why are they encouraging tightening the bonds that hold these economies together? It seems to me that this is what has gotten Europe in trouble in the first place. The Euro was a bad idea from the start and what has happened to Greece (and as a result, the rest of Europe) in the last five years if proof of this.
01:48 PM on 01/30/2012
the picture looks like a lobster is choking her out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ScottV
Damn Right I'm a Democrat!
12:51 PM on 01/30/2012
The picture makes it look like a Python is wrapped around her neck getting ready to bit it.
03:09 AM on 01/30/2012
No, No, No. No more money for EU Banks subsidized by the US taxpayer. We have too much debt as it is. We cannot bail out the whole world.
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blessedfrog
Smedley Butler
05:16 PM on 01/29/2012
This whole melt-down seems by design.

No economist worth any amount of salt (or an sentient human being)
failed to comprehend the magnitude and
unsustainability of the housing bubble.
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
02:50 PM on 01/29/2012
The bag was gorgeous.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ
12:29 PM on 01/29/2012
IMF = Ioan sharks. But if you see these guys show up on your doorstep, don't chase them away! Or the next thing you know the Marines will be landing on you for "humanitarian" aid.
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blessedfrog
Smedley Butler
05:14 PM on 01/29/2012
and your head of state will die in an odd plane crash
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
koos458
The Weather is Aways Nicer in Coos Bay
12:00 PM on 01/29/2012
When I say "We live in a kleptocracy," these are the guys I am talking about.
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beerbagger
12-pack of genius
09:40 AM on 01/29/2012
Argentina and the like told the IMF to suck it and now they've been booming economically.... They have problems like everywhere but they got out from underneath the IMF cartel.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
DoUGetItYet
Objectivity has no Ideology
09:39 AM on 01/29/2012
The IMF does not want you to remember that countries do go bankrupt and the world keeps turning.

They want you to forget tht Iceland's people voted AGAINST paying back the banks and managed to survive and YES.......THRIVE!
iam99
To know what you prefer...
06:56 AM on 01/29/2012
Let's employ some of the smartest people on the planet to create impossibly complex and virtually unintelligible contracts so's we can ensnare a simpler peoples into debt servitude - FOREVER!

What can possibly be WRONG with THAT?!!

Well, if the deal was so complex that it could not be understood by BOTH signers then the one side may just claim their incompetence and have the court throw out the stinky "agreement to servitude."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rosiebag
Big, Bold, Brassy
05:32 PM on 01/29/2012
They are busy working for Obama, you.ll have to wait, until their done stuffing their pockets.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
Expat Extraordinaire.
06:33 AM on 01/29/2012
It's amazing how many people have no clue how big of a scam the IMF is, the misery they are responsible for worldwide, and WHO really runs it. Ignorance is indeed bliss.
04:40 AM on 01/29/2012
Nobody needs to heed IMF warnings or forecasts, for they are partners in crime in causing the economic upheaval in the world. Wisdom tells us: “When one blind man (woman) leads the other, will not both fall in the ditch!” Thus, for there is not one economic expert realising that we are bound to universal laws which order our economic activities either for good, or for evil. This is as much true for us as by having to keep to the Laws of Physics, as well as to the Moral Laws in order to sustain ourselves. Further, we should stop treating the symptoms and start on the cause. For your information Google “The World Monetary Order”.
http://theworldmonetaryordertocome.blogspot.com/2010/11/introduction.html
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
pantherburns
labor creates all wealth
01:31 AM on 01/29/2012
Let's just tell them we're not paying one dime on what we owe. Everybody who's waiting by the barcalounger to collect a paycheck gets stiffed (that goes for you RMoney). Rewind to day one and we start over. All those vulture capitalists? Tell them to see Wimpy for payment. No more paying the parasites.
Couldn't resist the temptation.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
Expat Extraordinaire.
06:31 AM on 01/29/2012
Yep. I say reset and start over as well. It's the 1percent that wants this current failed experiment to go on because they have the most to lose. As long as there exist places on earth were you can live comfortably on as little as $1300 per month I'll always be fine - It's the billionaire sociopaths that won't be able to survive.