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IMF board expresses confidence in leader despite questions about past conduct

Kristalina Georgieva speaks at a microphone
Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, delivers a speech in the Netherlands on Sept. 6.
(Peter Dejong / Associated Press)
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The International Monetary Fund expressed “full confidence” in its managing director Tuesday in response to allegations that, while she was a World Bank official, she and others pressured staff members to change business rankings in an effort to placate China.

The IMF’s 24-member executive board said in a statement that its review “did not conclusively demonstrate that the managing director, Kristalina Georgieva, played an improper role.”

But it said a probe into possible misconduct by World Bank staff was continuing. The United States, the IMF’s largest shareholder, said it planned to closely monitor the further investigation into the issue. The World Bank and IMF are both global lenders in the United Nations system.

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Georgieva has denied any wrongdoing in response to an investigative report by the WilmerHale law firm. The report found she played a role in pressuring World Bank staff to amend data affecting 2018 rankings that were meant to show how welcoming China and other nations were to businesses.

Countries used the annual “Doing Business” report, which evaluated tax burdens, bureaucratic obstacles and regulatory systems, to attract foreign investment.

The rankings have been discontinued because of the controversy, which also prompted criticism that China, the world’s second-largest economy, has too much influence over international finance organizations.

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As the economy slows, China’s crackdown on the rich and famous may be an attempt to distract from ordinary families’ anxiety over their children’s future.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen spoke with Georgieva by phone and said the report “raised legitimate issues and concerns,” the Treasury Department said in a statement.

However, the Treasury agreed that, “absent further direct evidence with regard to the role of the managing director, there is not a basis for a change in IMF leadership.”

Yellen said it was crucial to defend the integrity of the IMF and the World Bank.

The U.S. “believes proactive steps must be taken to reinforce data integrity and credibility at the IMF, and that the institution and its leadership must renew their commitment to upholding transparency and whistleblower protections surrounding policies, research, and analysis to provide accountability and public oversight over key decisions,” the Treasury statement said.

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Sudden blackouts have highlighted vulnerabilities in China’s power sector and economy: overreliance on coal and overemphasis on growth, which coincided with rising coal prices this year to create a nationwide energy shortage.

The IMF had said late Friday it was seeking more “clarifying details” in its investigation. The board met again with Georgieva on Sunday.

Georgieva appeared before a panel for more than five hours last week after a presentation by WilmerHale that alleged she and other World Bank officials had pressured staff to alter the data.

The annual meetings of the 190-nation IMF and World Bank are being held this week in Washington, and the controversy surrounding the “Doing Business” report is threatening to overshadow the agenda of those meetings.

Georgieva, a 68-year-old Bulgarian economist, has served as managing director of the IMF since 2019. She was the fund’s first leader to come from an emerging-market economy rather than one of the traditional European economic powers, such as Germany and France.

In taking over the leadership of the IMF, she succeeded Christine Lagarde, who stepped down to take over as head of the European Central Bank.

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