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IMF chief muses about providing alternative to dollar


By: By Harry Dunphy | Date: 2010-03-01
IMF chief muses about providing alternative to dollar Submitted by cpowell on 05:25PM ET Friday, February 26, 2010. Section: Daily Dispatches By Harry Dunphy Associated Press via The Star Tribune, Minneapolis Friday, February 26, 2010 http://www.startribune.com/business/85541727.html WASHINGTON -- Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the head of the International Monetary Fund, suggested Friday that the organization might one day be called on to provide countries with a global reserve currency that would serve as an alternative to the U.S. dollar. "That day has not yet come, but I think it is intellectually healthy to explore these kinds of ideas now," he said in a speech on the future mandate of the 186-nation Washington-based lending organization. Strauss-Kahn said such an asset could be similar to but distinctly different from the IMF's special drawing rights, or SDRs, the accounting unit that countries use to hold funds within the IMF. It is based on a basket of major currencies. He said having other alternatives to the dollar "would limit the extent to which the international monetary system as a whole depends on the policies and conditions of a single, albeit dominant country." Strauss-Kahn, a former finance minister of France, said that during the recent global financial crisis, the dollar "played its role as a safe haven" asset, and the current international monetary system demonstrated resilience. "The challenge ahead is to find ways to limit the tension arising from the high demand for precautionary reserves on the one hand and the narrow supply of reserves on the other," he said. Several countries, including China and Russia, have called for an alternative to the dollar as a reserve currency and have suggested using the IMF's internal accounting unit. Strauss-Kahn said the IMF also needs to do a better job of tracing how risk percolates through the global economy. "Here it will be essential to improve our ability to monitor several dozen large complex financial institutions that make up the `plumbing' through which global capital flows," he said, while leaving national regulators the job of monitoring the solvency of individual institutions. * * *

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