IMF to sell bonds to raise 'crisis' funds
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is considering selling bonds to several developing countries to raise money to combat the global economic slump.
IMF is seeking more cash to finance loans and aid to member countries during worst economic slump in the fund���s 64-year history. As the institution taps some of its 185 members for additional cash injections, emerging economies say they want more decision-making power at the fund, setting up a possible clash with the rich nations that run it.
���I���m sure that this vehicle will be used,��� IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn told reporters on Saturday in Washington during meetings of IMF and the World Bank, referring to the bonds. ���Now we���re discussing with different creditors the way to implement it and the amount that we put in it.���
Bonds would offer ���flexibility���, he said, and their interest rate would be pegged to the value of IMF���s basket of currencies, known as Special Drawing Rights or SDRs.
Still, Brazilian finance minister Guido Mantega on April 24 dismissed the substance of IMF���s capital-raising bond sale proposal, as ���insufficient��� and ���premature���.
Brazil would want higher yields than those attached to US Treasuries to buy the new IMF securities, Mantega said after meeting with his counterparts from Russia, India and China at IMF���s headquarters. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose five basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, last week to 3%, according to BGCantor Market Data.
Less than a month after the Group of 20 advanced and emerging economies pledged to boost funding for IMF, some officials say member states aren���t making adequate contributions.
Canadian finance minister Jim Flaherty on Saturday said some G-20 nations aren���t doing their ���share��� to provide new emergency assistance funding for IMF.
IMF said it has received $324.5 billion in commitments from G-20 members since mid-March. Leaders of the G-20 agreed to triple the fund���s lending capacity to $750 billion, when they met in London on April 2.
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