A Guide To Committees, Groups, And Clubs
September 28, 2012
Political leaders and officials from around the world shape the work of the IMF through their various fora and bodies. With the IMF at the center of the coordinated global response to events in international financial markets and the world's economies, understanding what these groups do and how they work is important.
International Monetary and Financial Committee
The IMFC is responsible for advising, and reporting to, the IMF Board of Governors as it manages and shapes the international monetary and financial system. The IMFC also monitors developments in global liquidity and the transfer of resources to developing countries; considers proposals by the Executive Board to amend the Articles of Agreement; and deals with unfolding events that may disrupt the global monetary and financial system.
The IMFC usually meets twice a year, in September or October at the Bank-Fund Annual Meetings and in March or April at what are referred to as the Spring Meetings. The Committee discusses matters of concern affecting the global economy and also advises the IMF on the direction of its work. At the end of the meetings, the Committee issues a communiqué summarizing its views. These communiqués provide guidance for the IMF's work program during the six months leading up to the next Spring or Annual Meetings. There is no formal voting at the IMFC, which operates by consensus.
The IMFC has 24 members who are central bank governors, ministers, or others of comparable rank and who are drawn from the governors of the Fund's 188 member countries. The membership reflects the composition of the IMF's Executive Board: each member country that appoints, and each group of member countries that elects, an Executive Director appoints a member of the IMFC. The group is currently chaired by Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance of Singapore, who was selected to head the Committee in March 2011. A number of international institutions, including the World Bank, participate as observers in the IMFC's meetings.
IMFC Membership | ||
---|---|---|
Nationalities of current members: | ||
Singapore (Chair) Algeria Argentina Australia Belgium Brazil Canada China | France Gabon Germany India Indonesia Italy Japan Netherlands | Russia Saudi Arabia South Africa Spain Sweden Switzerland United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States |
Development Committee
The Joint Ministerial Committee of the Boards of Governors of the Bank and Fund on the Transfer of Real Resources to Developing Countries, better known as the Development Committee, was established in October 1974 to advise the Boards of Governors of the IMF and World Bank on critical development issues and on the financial resources required to promote economic development in developing countries. Over the years, the Committee has interpreted its mandate to include trade and global environmental issues in addition to traditional development matters. The Committee usually meets twice a year following the IMFC meeting.
The Development Committee has 25 members (usually ministers of finance or development) who together represent the full membership of the IMF and World Bank. The present chairperson is Marek Belka, President of the National Bank of Poland.
Development Committee Membership | ||
---|---|---|
Poland (Chair) Argentina Bahrain Belgium Brazil Canada China Côte d’Ivoire Denmark France | Germany India Indonesia Italy Japan Mexico Morocco Netherlands New Zealand | Nigeria Russia Saudi Arabia Switzerland United Kingdom United States Zimbabwe |
Financial Stability Board
In order to strengthen the surveillance of financial markets, the G-20 leaders decided in April 2009 to expand the membership of the former Financial Stability Forum and renamed it the Financial Stability Board. The new membership includes all G-20 countries, the former FSF members, Spain, and the European Commission.
The FSB is designed to help improve the functioning of financial markets, and to reduce systemic risk through enhanced information exchange and international cooperation among the authorities responsible for maintaining financial stability.
The FSF first met on April 14, 1999, at IMF headquarters, and has since then met semi-annually. The FSF was made an observer of the IMFC in September 1999.
Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of Canada, chairs the FSB in his personal capacity. The FSB consists of a Plenary, a Steering Committee, other committees and sub-groups as needed, and a secretariat based in Basel, Switzerland. The Plenary is the decision-making organ of the FSB; its members are the heads of members' treasuries, central banks, and supervisory agencies; the chairs of the main standard-setting bodies and central bank committees; and senior representatives of international financial institutions (Bank for International Settlements, European Central Bank, European Commission, International Monetary Fund, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and The World Bank). The Steering Committee provides operational guidance between plenary meetings to carry forward the directions of the FSB; its composition is decided by the Plenary at the proposal of the Chair. The Plenary may establish Standing Committees and working groups as necessary.
Financial Stability Board Membership | ||
---|---|---|
Chairman (1) | ||
National Authorities (24) | ||
International Financial Institutions (6) | ||
International Regulatory and Supervisory Groupings (6) | ||
Committees of Central Bank Experts (2) |
Group of Seven
The Group of Seven (G-7) major industrial countries began to hold annual economic summits (meetings at the level of head of state or government) in 1975. At the level of finance minister and central bank governor, the G-7 superseded the G-5 as the main policy coordination group during 1986–1987, particularly following the Louvre Accord of February 1987, which was agreed by the G-5 plus Canada and subsequently endorsed by the G-7. Since 1987, the G-7 finance ministers and central bank governors have met at least semi-annually to monitor developments in the world economy and assess economic policies. The Managing Director of the IMF usually participates, by invitation, in the surveillance discussions of the G-7 finance ministers and central bank governors. Although, Russia has joined the group, thereby forming the Group of Eight (see below), the G-7 continues to function as a forum for discussion of economic and financial issues among the major industrial countries.
G-7 Members | ||
---|---|---|
Canada | Japan | |
France | The United Kingdom | |
Germany | The United States | |
Italy |
Group of Eight
The Group of Eight (G-8) was conceived when Russia first participated in part of the 1994 Naples Summit of the G-7. Again in 1997, Russia joined, for political discussions, the Denver Summit after the conclusion of the G-7 economic summit. At the 1998 Birmingham Summit, Russia joined as full participant, which marked the establishment of the Group of Eight, which convenes annual summits of the heads of state or government of the major industrial countries to discuss the major economic and political issues on their agenda.
G-8 Members | ||
---|---|---|
Canada | Japan | |
France | Russia | |
Germany | The United Kingdom | |
Italy | The United States |
Group of Ten
The Group of Ten (G-10) refers to the group of countries that have agreed to participate in the General Arrangements to Borrow (GAB), a supplementary borrowing arrangement that can be invoked if the IMF's resources are estimated to be below member's needs. The GAB was established in 1962, when the governments of eight IMF members—Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States—and the central banks of two others, Germany and Sweden, agreed to make resources available to the IMF for drawings by participants, and, under certain circumstances, for drawings by nonparticipants. The GAB was strengthened in 1964 by the association of Switzerland, then a nonmember of the Fund, but the name of the G-10 remained the same. Following its inception, the G-10 broadened its engagement with the Fund, including issuing reports that culminated in the creation of the Special Drawing Right (SDR) in 1969. The G-10 was also the forum for discussions that led to the December 1971 Smithsonian Agreement following the collapse of the Bretton Woods system. The following international organizations are official observers of the activities of the G-10: The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), European Commission, IMF, and OECD.
G-10 Members | ||
---|---|---|
Belgium | Netherlands | |
Canada | Sweden | |
France | Switzerland | |
Germany | The United Kingdom | |
Italy | The United States | |
Japan |
Group of Fifteen
The Group of Fifteen (G-15) was established at the Ninth Non-Aligned Summit Meeting in Belgrade, Yugoslavia in September 1989. It is composed of countries from Latin America, Africa, and Asia with a common goal of enhanced growth and prosperity. The G-15 focuses on cooperation among developing countries in the areas of investment, trade, and technology. The membership of the G-15 has expanded to 17 countries, but the name has remained unchanged.
G-15 Members | ||
---|---|---|
Algeria | Indonesia | Nigeria |
Argentina | Iran, Islamic Republic of | Senegal |
Brazil | Jamaica | Sri Lanka |
Chile | Kenya | Venezuela, República Bolivariana de |
Egypt | Malaysia | Zimbabwe |
India | Mexico |
Group of Twenty
The Group of Twenty (G-20), which superseded the Group of 33 (see below), was foreshadowed at the Cologne Summit of the G-7 in June 1999, but was formally established at the G-7 Finance Ministers' meeting on September 26, 1999. The inaugural meeting took place on December 15–16, 1999, in Berlin. The G-20 was formed as a new forum for cooperation and consultation on matters pertaining to the international financial system. It studies, reviews, and promotes discussion among key industrial and emerging market countries of policy issues pertaining to the promotion of international financial stability, and seeks to address issues that go beyond the responsibilities of any one organization.
As the global economic crisis unfolded, and with the meetings of G-20 Heads of State and Government in November 2008, and in April and September 2009, the G-20 assumed an increasingly active role on global economic issues. This culminated in leaders designating the G-20 as "the premier forum for our international economic cooperation" during their Pittsburg Summit.
The membership of the G-20 comprises the finance ministers and central bank governors of the G-7, 12 other key countries, and also the European Union, which is represented by the rotating Council Presidency and the European Central Bank. To ensure that global economic fora and institutions work together, the Managing Director of the IMF and the President of the World Bank, plus the Chairs of the IMFC and the Development Committee, also participate in G-20 meetings on an ex-officio basis. Mexico is the 2012 chair of the G-20, to be followed by Russia in 2013.
G-20 Members | |||
---|---|---|---|
Argentina | France | Japan | South Africa |
Australia | Germany | Korea, Republic of | Turkey |
Brazil | India | Mexico | The United Kingdom |
Canada | Indonesia | Russia | The United States |
China | Italy | Saudi Arabia | The European Union |
Group of Twenty-Four
The Group of Twenty-Four (G-24), originally a chapter of the G-77, was established in 1971 to coordinate the positions of developing countries on international monetary and development finance issues and to ensure that their interests were adequately represented in negotiations on international monetary matters. The group, which is officially called the Intergovernmental Group of Twenty-Four on International Monetary Affairs and Development, is not an organ of the IMF, but the IMF provides secretariat services for the Group. Its meetings usually take place twice a year, prior to the IMFC and Development Committee meetings, to enable developing country members to discuss agenda items beforehand. Although membership in the G-24 is strictly limited to 24 countries, any developing country can join discussions. China has been a “special invitee” since 1981. Palaniappan Chidambaram, Minister of Finance for India, is the current chairman of the G-24.
G-24 Members | |||
---|---|---|---|
Algeria | Egypt | Iran, Islamic Rep. of | Philippines |
Argentina | Ethiopia | Lebanon | South Africa |
Brazil | Gabon | Mexico | Sri Lanka |
Colombia | Ghana | Nigeria | Syrian Arab Republic |
Congo, Dem. Rep. of | Guatemala | Pakistan | Trinidad and Tobago |
Côte d’Ivoire | India | Peru | Venezuela, República Bolivariana de |
Group of Seventy-Seven
The Group of Seventy-Seven (G-77) was established on June 15, 1964, by the "Joint Declaration of the Seventy-Seven Countries" issued at the end of the first session of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in Geneva. It was formed to articulate and promote the collective economic interests of its members and to strengthen their joint negotiating capacity on all major international economic issues in the United Nations system. The membership of the G-77 has expanded to 132 member countries, but the original name has been retained because of its historical significance. The Chairmanship rotates on a regional basis (between Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean) and is held for one year. Currently, Algeria holds the Chairmanship of the Group of 77 in New York for 2012.
G-77 Members | |||
---|---|---|---|
Afghanistan, Islamic Republic of | Djibouti | Libya | São Tomé and Príncipe |
Algeria | Dominica | Madagascar | Saudi Arabia |
Angola | Dominican Republic | Malawi | Senegal |
Antigua and Barbuda | Ecuador | Malaysia | Seychelles |
Argentina | Egypt | Maldives | Sierra Leone |
Bahamas, The | El Salvador | Mali | Singapore |
Bahrain | Equatorial Guinea | Marshall Islands | Solomon Islands |
Bangladesh | Eritrea | Mauritania | Somalia |
Barbados | Ethiopia | Mauritius | South Africa |
Belize | Fiji | Micronesia, Federated States of | Sri Lanka |
Benin | Gabon | Mongolia | Sudan |
Bhutan | Gambia, The | Morocco | Suriname |
Bolivia | Ghana | Mozambique | Swaziland |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | Grenada | Myanmar | Syrian Arab Republic |
Botswana | Guatemala | Namibia | Tajikistan |
Brazil | Guinea | Nepal | Tanzania |
Brunei Darussalam | Guinea-Bissau | Nicaragua | Thailand |
Burkina Faso | Guyana | Niger | Timor-Leste |
Burundi | Haiti | Nigeria | Togo |
Cambodia | Honduras | Oman | Tonga |
Cameroon | India | Pakistan | Trinidad and Tobago |
Cape Verde | Indonesia | Palestine | Tunisia |
Central African Republic | Iran, Islamic Republic of | Panama | Turkmenistan |
Chad | Iraq | Papua New Guinea | Uganda |
Chile | Jamaica | Paraguay | United Arab Emirates |
China | Jordan | Peru | Uruguay |
Colombia | Kenya | Philippines | Vanuatu |
Comoros | Korea, Democratic People’s Republic of | Qatar | Venezuela, República Bolivariana de |
Congo, Dem. Rep. of | Kuwait | Rwanda | Vietnam |
Congo, Rep. of | Lao P.D.R. | St. Kitts and Nevis | Yemen |
Costa Rica | Lebanon | St. Lucia | Zambia |
Côte d'Ivoire | Lesotho | St. Vincent and the Grenadines | Zimbabwe |
Cuba | Liberia | Samoa |
Creditors Club
Paris Club
The Paris Club is an informal group of official creditors, industrial countries in most cases, that seeks coordinated and sustainable solutions for debtor nations facing payment difficulties. Paris Club creditors provide debt treatments to debtor countries in form of rescheduling or reduction in debt service during a defined period or as of a set date. Although the Paris Club has no legal basis, its members agree to a set of rules and principles designed to reach a coordinated agreement on debt rescheduling quickly and efficiently. This voluntary gathering dates back to 1956, when Argentina agreed to meet its public creditors in Paris. Since then, the Paris Club, and related ad hoc groups, has reached 426 agreements covering 89 debtor countries. The Paris Club and the IMF have extensive contact, since the Paris Club normally requires countries to have an active Fund-supported program in order to qualify for a rescheduling agreement.
London Club
The London Club is an informal group of commercial banks that join together to negotiate their claims against a sovereign debtor. The debtor initiates a process in which a London Club “Advisory Committee” is formed. The Committee is chaired by a leading financial firm and includes representatives from other exposed firms. Upon signing of a restructuring agreement, the Committee is dissolved.
Archive
With the passage of time, a number of committees, groups and clubs have changed or have been superseded. Some of these are archived in this section.
Group of Five
The Group of Five (G-5) major industrial countries was established in the mid-1970s to coordinate the economic policies of France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. (These countries' currencies also constituted the SDR, an international reserve asset, created by the IMF in 1969 to supplement the existing official reserves of member countries). The G-5 was the main policy coordination group among the major industrial countries through the Plaza Agreement of September 1985. It was subsequently superseded by the G-7.
Group of Twenty-Two
The establishment on a temporary basis of the Group of Twenty-Two (referred to also as the “Willard Group”) was announced by President Clinton and the other leaders of APEC countries at their meeting in Vancouver in November 1997, when they agreed to organize a gathering of finance ministers and central bank governors to advance the reform of the architecture of the global financial system. The G-22 comprised finance ministers and central bank governors from the G-7 industrial countries and 15 other countries (Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, Hong Kong SAR, India, Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Poland, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, and Thailand). It first met on April 16, 1998 in Washington, D.C. to examine issues related to the stability of the international financial system and effective functioning of global capital markets. It was superseded first by the G-33 and then by the G-20.
Group of Thirty-Three
The Group of Thirty-Three (G-33) superseded the G-22 in early 1999, and was itself superseded by the G-20 later in the year. Several seminars of the G-33 on the international financial architecture were convened at the initiative of the finance ministers and central bank governors of the G-7. The first meeting was hosted by Germany in Bonn on March 11, 1999.
The G-33 consisted of the finance ministers and central bank governors of Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Côte d'Ivoire, Egypt, France, Germany, Hong Kong SAR, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
1 The IMF also has a set of credit arrangements with members and institutions, the New Arrangements to Borrow (NAB), which became effective in November 1998. In March 2011, NAB participants ratified the expansion of the NAB up to SDR 367.5 billion (about $560 billion), once all new participants have adhered to the expanded NAB. In November 2011, Poland joined the NAB, bringing its total size to SDR370.0 billion (about $565 billion).
6 comments:
Investors are once again being spooked by political uncertainty from both Spain and Italy as both countries deal with local political difficulties that could derail ongoing and future reform programs.
While markets appear able to shrug off bad economic data, as Spain January unemployment jumps 132k, it is politics once again that has markets worried as Spanish PM Rajoy deals with a corruption scandal over illegal cash payments that could have the potential to seriously damage his government.
Even in Italy the calm waters of recent weeks have hit stormy seas as the general election campaign starts to see a rise in support for Berlusconi which has increased the risks of political deadlock post-election rising here as well.
Allegations of corruption against Spanish PM Rajoy and reports that former Italian PM Berlusconi is gaining ground in the country’s polls ahead of this month’s election took some of the shine off the euro on Monday.
Notwithstanding its latest wobble, we continue to forecast an appreciation of the euro to $1.40 by mid-year as sentiment towards the euro-zone slowly improves. But we are also sticking to our forecast that that the exchange rate will slip back to $1.25 by year-end – a view which is predicated on the assumption that the crisis will flare up again in the second half of the year.
That being said, Monday’s news underlines the fact that such a flare-up could happen at any time.
Shares finish deeply in the red
Europe's stock markets have closed, posting the largest daily falls of 2013.
Here's the damage:
FTSE 100: down 100 points at 6246, -1.58%
Germany's DAX: down 195 points at 7638, -2.5%
French CAC: down 113 points at 3659, -3%
Spanish IBEX: down 310 points at 7919, -3.77%
Italian FTSE MIB: down 779 points at 16539, - 4.5%
And over on Wall Street the main indices are down around 1%
In the foreign exchange markets, the euro has now fallen by over 1 cent against the US dollar to $1.352.
Senior aides to prime minister Antonis Samaras have insisted they do not want to resort to forcibly mobilizing the strikers back to work following the uproar over a similar move to end a nine-day strike by metro workers recently. Both sectors are demanding that the coalition roll back tax increases, wage cuts and other austerity measures demanded in return for emergency bailout funds from the EU and IMF.
The Eurozone remains in deep economic & financial trouble but it is social & political shocks we must watch out for! A very fragile calm!
Italy's former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi announcing his ;'last great electoral and political battle'. Photograph: Reuters
In Italy - the eurozone's other hotbed of political uncertainty - the gloves are off and the bond yields are up.
The prospect of a hung parliament, and a move away from the reforms implemented by Mario Monti's government, pushed Italian 10-year bonds up by 10 basis points this morning to 4.42%.
This follows Silvio Berlusconi's pledge yesterday to abolish Italy's unpopular property tax, and even refund the money paid since prime minister Monti introduced it in 2011. Terribly generous of him, eh?
My colleague LIzzy Davies reported from Rome last night:
In a speech aimed at winning over the large number of undecided voters, the billionaire media mogul cast himself once again as a friend of the people who would break with the agenda of the technocrat prime minister, Mario Monti.
The centrepiece of a series of measures announced in Milan was a promise not only to abolish the loathed property tax but also to refund payments made in 2012 – costing the treasury an estimated €4bn (£3.5bn).
Monti was swift to dismiss Berlusconi's speech, saying the former PM "has never kept any of his promises". Still, the offer of a tax cut will probably win Berlusconi's party more votes than it costs him, which could make the election (on 24-25 February) even tighter.
As Rabobank's Jane Foley commented:
There has been a rise in speculation that the Italian election scheduled for the end of this month could bring a hung parliament. This would threaten the progress of further budgetary reform.
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