By DESMOND BUTLER
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The managing director of the International Monetary Fund made an impassioned plea Tuesday for American leadership in the global economy as she called for the international community to give her organization “more firepower” to bolster tottering economies.
Christine Lagarde told the annual meeting of The Associated Press that last week’s move by eurozone countries to boost their own rescue fund has strengthened her case to ask other large economies to expand the IMF’s financial war chest.
“We certainly need more resources,” she said, without specifying how much more was needed. Lagarde said the IMF would address that question at its spring meeting in two weeks.
The IMF has about $400 billion in resources that it can use to provide loans to countries in trouble. Lagarde has talked about expanding those resources to close to $1 trillion. The 17 countries that use the euro already have promised to provide $200 billion of that amount.
Though the United States is the IMF’s largest shareholder, the Treasury Department has not asked Congress for new IMF funding and will face opposition from Republicans if it does.
Lagarde argues that the IMF’s ability to rescue economies in Europe and elsewhere has a direct bearing on the U.S. economy. She said Europe’s faltering would quickly spread, and the U.S. economic recovery, slowly gaining strength, “might well be in jeopardy.”
“America has a large stake” in how Europe and the rest of the world fares, Lagarde said.
Lagarde said the global economy is making some advances in digging itself out of the worst downturn in decades, but that the recovery remains particularly fragile in Europe. She suggested cutting government spending too quickly in developed countries like the United States and larger European nations could make things worse, not better.
Policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic need “breathing space to finish the job,” she said. As the world’s largest economy, the United States could not shirk its outsized role in the global economy, Lagarde said.
“The world needs U.S. economic leadership,” she said. “Now is not the time to retire, now is not the time to withdraw, now is not the time to phase out. Now is the time to engage.”
Lagarde’s remarks came after the eurozone countries on Friday boosted their emergency bailout funds for heavily indebted countries to $1.1 trillion. That was short of the $1.3 trillion that Lagarde and other international leaders have said is needed to calm financial markets.
Since the Europeans have moved first to raise their firewall, “the time has come to increase our firepower.