Chapter 5 Three treaties for the reform of the IMF and the World Bank
Background
5.1
This chapter considers three treaty actions for the reform of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for Reconstruction
and Development (the World Bank):
n Proposed Amendment
of the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund to Enhance
Voice and Participation in the International Monetary Fund (IMF Voice and
Participation Amendment);
n Proposed Amendment
of the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund to Expand the
Investment Authority of the International Monetary Fund (IMF Investment
Authority Amendment); and
n Proposed Amendment
of the Articles of Agreement of the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development to Enhance Voice and Participation in the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (World Bank Voice and Participation
Amendment).
5.2
The three treaty actions were presented together with a single National
Interest Analysis (NIA). According to the Treasury, the three treaties were
presented together because they have the common aim of improving the
effectiveness and legitimacy of the IMF and the World Bank.[1]
Government request to expedite consideration and Report 104
5.3
The three treaties were tabled in Parliament on 20 August 2009[2],
with the Committee’s time for consideration expiring on 18 November 2009.
5.4
On 27 August 2009, the Treasurer, the Hon Wayne Swan MP, wrote to the
Committee to request that a recommendation on treaty action in relation to
these three treaties be made by 10 September 2009.
5.5
In support of this request, the Treasurer advised that
10 September 2009 was the last date on which member nations could
advise the IMF that they had accepted the reforms contained in the IMF Voice
and Participation Amendment and the IMF Investment Authority Amendment if the member
nation wished to be included in the list of countries accepting the amendment
presented to the G20 meeting on 24 and 25 September 2009.[3]
5.6
The Treasurer argued that, as Australia had been co-chair of the G20
Working Group on IMF Reform, it would be politic for Australia to be amongst
those seen to be supporting the reform of the IMF. The Treasurer also stated that
having the reforms agreed prior to a forthcoming G20 summit would substantially
assist Australia’s negotiating position on future reforms.[4]
5.7
After conducting a hearing with Treasury officials and satisfying itself
that ratification of the treaties was in Australia’s interests, the Committee
agreed to the Treasurer’s request. On 9 September 2009, the Committee tabled
Report 104, which indicated the Committee’s support for binding treaty action
in relation to the three treaties.[5]
5.8
In making this recommendation, the Committee noted that it would provide
a more detailed report on the treaties at a later date.[6]
The IMF and the World Bank
5.9
The IMF and the World Bank are institutions formed as a result of a
meeting in July 1944, attended by 45 countries, which established a framework
for international financial cooperation after the Second World War. The
framework was intended to prevent a repeat of the circumstances that had
produced the Great Depression. The IMF and World Bank are collectively known
as the Bretton Woods Institutions, after the location of the meeting.[7]
5.10
The IMF is an international membership based organisation with the goals
of supporting stability in the global economy through:
…promoting international monetary cooperation, exchange
stability, and orderly exchange arrangements; fostering economic growth and
employment; and providing temporary financial assistance to members, helping to
ease balance of payments adjustment.[8]
5.11
The World Bank supports international economic development and poverty
reduction in developing and emerging economies through the provision of loans,
grants, guarantees, equity, risk management products and non-lending analytical
services. It is also an international membership based organisation. [9]
IMF Voice Participation Amendment
5.12
Participation in the IMF is based on a voting system that provides 250
votes for each member nation, and additional votes based on relative economic
weight of each member country in the global economy. These additional votes
are referred to as ‘quotas’. Quotas are allocated using a formula that
incorporates the GDP, openness, economic variability and the international
reserves of each member nation.[10]
5.13
Because of the way the quotas are allocated, the number of votes in each
quota has increased significantly since the establishment of the IMF, while the
basic voting allocation for each member nation has remained the same. Consequently,
there has been a shift in the balance of power within the IMF towards the
countries with greater economic weight. There are currently 2,217,033 votes,
of which only 46,500 constitute the basic voting allocation.[11]
5.14
According to the NIA, the IMF Voice and Participation Amendment aims to
redress this steadily increasing imbalance by tripling the number of basic
votes allocated to each country to 750, and then fixing the proportion of basic
votes to quota votes in perpetuity. The change will result in a decline in the
voting power of the countries with larger economies.[12]
In total, the reform package will result in a shift in voting share of 2.7 per
cent from large economies to smaller economies.[13]
5.15
Australia’s voting share will decline marginally from 1.47 per cent of
votes to 1.31 per cent of votes.[14]
5.16
The IMF Voice and Participation Amendment will also change the staffing
allocation system within the IMF. The full time board of the IMF is made up of
24 Executive Directors. Each Executive Director is permitted to appoint
an alternate who can assist with their workload. A number of these represent
individual countries, but 19 are elected to represent a number of countries in
constituencies. Constituency based Executive Directors can have significant
workloads.[15]
5.17
The Treaty will allow some of the constituency based Executive Directors
to appoint two alternates in order to better balance their workload.[16]
5.18
The voice participation amendments were recommended by the IMF Executive
Board in March 2008.[17] At the time, the
reforms were described by a former United States Assistant Treasury Secretary
and others in the senior ranks of the international financial community as:
…falling far short in addressing the challenges facing the
IMF and its evolution towards a truly global institution with more balanced and
incisive representation and voting power.[18]
5.19
Representatives of countries that will benefit from this reform have
also indicated their dissatisfaction with the extent of the changes. In an
article commenting on the proposals at the time, the Washington Post
quoted India’s executive director at the IMF as stating that the proposal
‘…falls short of our expectations…and is certainly not a huge shift.’[19]
5.20
In light of this criticism, the IMF has continued to examine reform
options, and in March 2009 released the Final Report of the Committee on IMF
Governance.[20]
5.21
The Report identifies a number of flaws in the IMF governance regime.
In particular, the Report found:
n the changes in voting
power to date have been marginal, and ongoing reform of voting power is slow,
with a further review of voting power not scheduled until 2013;[21]
n the second dimension
of governance, the decision making process itself, has not been subject to
reform, and is a significant contributor to the lack of trust, confidence and
legitimacy in the organisation;[22]
n the Governance bodies
in the organisation have impeded timely responses to problems, and have
resulted in less formal, and consequently less transparent, decision making mechanisms
being adopted;[23] and
n the governance regime
lacked oversight and direction from high level political representation such as
the leaders of the member countries.[24]
5.22
The Committee recommended that:
n the next review of
voting power be conducted in Spring 2010;[25]
n the creation of a
ministerial level council to foster political engagement in the funds’
decisions and make the key strategic decisions for the organisation;[26]
and
n the creation of a
Board to perform the executive function, implementing the decisions of the
ministerial level council.[27]
5.23
The Committee on IMF Governance Reform’s recommendations appear to have
had some impact. The Department of the Treasury advised the Treaties Committee
that the G20 group of nations agreed to bring forward the next review of voting
power to January 2011, and that ‘…there is an expectation that that quota
increase will be substantial.’[28]
5.24
The Report of the Committee on IMF Governance Reform argues that the
IMF’s problems with legitimacy, trust and confidence extend a good deal further
than the balance of quotas. This view is backed up by the response to the
acceptance of the IMF Voice and Participation Amendment at the G20 meeting
attended by the Treasurer on 24 and 25 September 2009. Quoted in
Bloomberg.com, the President of the Centre for Global Development, Ms Nancy
Birdsall stated:
These are steps in the right direction, but we should not
fool ourselves that this is going to bring any fundamental, structural shift in
power and influence by itself.[29]
5.25
The Committee expresses concern about the ongoing IMF voting imbalance.
The Committee believes that if Australia is to continue playing a significant
role in improving the legitimacy of the IMF, the Government will need to consider
developing approaches to improve the legitimacy of the decision making
processes within the IMF.
5.26
It is clear there are a number of well-considered proposals to guide
further reforms. If the international community is serious about addressing
trust and confidence in the IMF, then the IMF Voice and Participation Amendment
is really only a small first step in the process. The Committee believes that
the Australian Government should use the good will it has gained by having the
IMF Voice and Participation Amendment agreed prior to the G20 meeting to support reforms
that improve confidence in the IMF’s decision making process.
Recommendation 5 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government use
the good will it has gained by agreeing to the IMF Voice and Participation
Amendment prior to the G20 meeting to progress improvements in the balance of
voting power and the confidence and legitimacy of the IMF’s decision making
process.
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IMF Investment Authority Amendment
5.27
The IMF’s income derived from its lending activities to finance its
general administrative expenses is given effect by the IMF Articles, which
provide that the IMF can only invest in the marketable obligations of members
or international organisations.[30] In other words, the IMF
relies on interest payments from loans made to member countries.
5.28
In recent years, this income has declined sharply, causing a
deterioration in the budgetary position of the IMF. In the 2007-08 financial
year, the IMF ran a deficit of US$165m.[31]
5.29
Lending in the last financial year has increased, so income is also
expected to increase. However, the NIA states that some reform of the income
model is required to diversify the income base of the IMF and reduce reliance
on loan repayments.[32]
5.30
The new funding model combines income from lending activities with the
following new sources of income:
n an endowment funded
by profits from the sale of some of the IMF’s gold reserves (the IMF is one of
the largest holders of gold reserves in the world);
n a mandate to invest
funds; and
n cost recovery from
concessional lending. [33]
5.31
Any profits made using this funding model will be returned to member
states in the form of dividend payments.[34]
5.32
The IMF’s discretion to invest funds will be limited. The IMF
Investment Authority Amendment would require:
…that all investments be made in accordance with rules and
regulations… adopted by the Fund by a 70 per cent majority of total voting
power.[35]
5.33
In discussing the investment aspect of the new funding model, the IMF
Board of Governors indicated that:
The Board of Governors’ approval of a broader investment
mandate will enable the Fund to increase the average expected return and adapt
its investment strategy over time. The investment policies will reflect the
public nature of the funds to be invested and include safeguards to ensure that
the broadened investment authority does not lead to actual or perceived
conflicts of interest.[36]
5.34
The Committee is of the view that additional safeguards are necessary to
ensure that the IMF’s investment strategy does not conflict with its goals of
international economic stability and fostering growth and economic development.
In particular:
n IMF funds should not
be invested in such a way as to endanger those funds through high risk
investments;
n IMF funds should not
be used to invest in the manufacture of arms or military equipment; and
n IMF funds should not
be used to invest in environmentally damaging industries.
5.35
The Committee believes that, when participating in IMF discussions about
its investment strategy, the Australian Government should advocate a position
consistent with these goals.
Recommendation 6 |
|
The Committee recommends that, consistent with the IMF’s
goals of international economic stability and fostering growth and economic
development, the Australian Government advocate that the IMF not invest in:
n high
risk investments;
n the
manufacture of arms or military equipment; and
n environmentally
damaging industries.
|
World Bank Voice and Participation Amendment
5.36
The World Bank has a similar participation system to the IMF, with
voting power distributed on a basic allocation for each country and a quota
allocation based on the size of a member country’s economy. Like the IMF, the
voting structure has resulted in a concentration of voting power in the hands
of larger economies over time.[37]
5.37
The World Bank Voice and Participation Amendment will double the number
of basic votes allocated to each country and then fix the proportion of basic
votes to total votes in perpetuity. The change will result in an increase in
the voting power of small economies from 42.6 per cent to 44 per cent.
Australia’s share of the votes will decline from 1.53 per cent to 1.49 per cent
of the vote.[38]
5.38
The World Bank considers this change, agreed to in 2008, as only the
starting point for a larger shift in voting power. Indeed, on
6 October 2009, the Development Committee of the World Bank released
a proposal to increase the quota of votes allocated to developing countries to
at least 47 per cent.[39] This proposal will be
considered by the Board of Governors in the Northern Spring of 2010. In
addition, when the President of the World Bank recently addressed the Board of
Governors, he foreshadowed an attempt to bring the share of votes for
developing countries up to 50 per cent over time.[40]
5.39
As with the IMF, it is clear that the World Bank Voice and Participation
Amendment addresses only one aspect of the legitimacy problem being experienced
by the World Bank. According to the Centre for Global Development, other
identified aspects of the legitimacy problem include:
n a lack of a
transparent, formalised method for selecting the World Bank president;[41]
n the relative lack of
representation from African member nations on the Board;[42]
n confusion within the
Bank about the role it should play in each particular setting;[43]
and
n a lack of sensitivity
to the political constraints existing within member nations using the Bank’s
services.[44]
5.40
It is also clear that the Bank is now seen only as a lender of last
resort in middle income countries such as China and India. Middle income
countries in need of loan services are increasingly accessing private capital
markets as an alternative to the World Bank, undermining the World Bank’s
reputation as an international institution.[45]
5.41
The wider reform context is likely to become the focus of attention at
the World Bank as the High Level Commission examining World Bank Governance,
set up by the President of the World Bank in 2008, reports later this year.[46]
5.42
While recognising that Voice and Participation reforms are only a small
part of an overall process of reform, the Committee believes the Australia
Government can make a contribution to the reform process by supporting the
recent proposal of the Development Committee of the World Bank to increase the
quota of votes allocated to developing countries at the World Bank’s meeting in
2010.
Recommendation 7 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
support the proposal of the Development Committee of the World Bank to
increase the quota of votes allocated to developing countries to at least 47
per cent.
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