The following provides a plain english note on a couple of foundations
of the IMF which some may not have grokked before (SDRs will cause/ be
blamed for future inflation ('through the back door')), although it
ultimately devolves into a book advertisement (which I guess may be of
interest anyway considering the topic).

Its structure is mildly deceptive - the author ought to have (in my
world shatteringly high opinion) been upfront that his article arises
from a new book he is hawking.

Zenaan



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Behind Closed Doors at the IMF

By Jim Rickards, Strategist, Strategic Intelligence

The Washington, DC, area is thick with secret agencies with ‘three-letter 
names’, such as CIA, FBI, NSA and less well-known outfits such as the Defense 
Intelligence Agency (DIA) and the Director of National Intelligence (DNI).

One of the most powerful, and also most secretive, of these agencies is an 
institution that is not even part of the US government. It’s an autonomous part 
of an emerging scheme of global governance accountable only to a small elite of 
central bankers, finance ministers and heads of state. That institution is the 
International Monetary Fund, or the IMF.

Everything about the IMF is designed to deceive you — beginning with the name. 
The IMF is not really a ‘fund’ in the sense of an endowment or mutual fund; it 
functions as the central bank of the world, taking deposits, called 
‘borrowings’, from countries around the world and making loans to its members.

It prints money like most central banks, but this world money has the opaque 
name of special drawing right, or SDR.

Now, when I say world money, it sounds kind of spooky or scary, but special 
drawing right is a funny name. The global financial elites pick strange names 
for what they’re doing so people don’t understand what it is. The International 
Monetary Fund (IMF) can print these SDRs.

They have in the past — there’s nothing new about it. SDRs were created in 
1969, and hundreds of billions of them have been issued over the years. But the 
IMF only issues them when there’s a financial panic. They don’t issue them 
every day or when times are good.

You will not be able to use them, touch them or feel them. You will not be able 
to spend them. You will not have them. SDRs are not going to be walking-around 
money. You’ll still have dollars, but the dollars will be a local currency, not 
a global reserve currency.

So for example, when I go to Turkey, I cash in some US dollars and get some 
Turkish lira. I use the lira to pay for taxis in Turkey. Then when I leave, I 
cash them out again. That will be how the US dollar is used. You’ll use the US 
dollar when you come to the United States, but it’ll be like the Aussie dollar: 
something you use when you go there.

The dollar won’t be the important global reserve currency. The SDR will be used 
for the settlement of the balance of payments between countries, the price of 
oil and perhaps the financial statements of the 100 largest global 
corporations. The impact on everyday investors will be inflationary.

The difference, however, is that, right now, if we have inflation, everyone 
blames the Fed. In the future, however, you’ll have inflation coming from SDRs. 
That means when people try to blame the Fed, the Fed will say it’s not us; it’s 
those guys over there on G Street in Northwest Washington. Go blame them. No 
one even knows where the IMF is. So the SDR is just a way to get inflation 
through the back door.

The IMF has a convoluted governance structure in which the highest 
decision-making body, the Board of Governors, has little power because the 
votes are weighted in favour of the largest economies, such as the US. Actual 
power rests with the blandly named International Monetary and Financial 
Committee, the IMFC.

Everything about the IMF is designed to make it difficult for outsiders like 
you to have any idea what is going on.

The insiders like that arrangement just fine.

Given this culture and history, it was surprising to see the publication a few 
years back of a book by Liaquat Ahamed, Money and Tough Love — On Tour With the 
IMF . The book is the most detailed account yet from behind the scenes at IMF 
headquarters.

The author also reports on an IMF annual meeting in Tokyo and goes on the road 
with IMF ‘missions’ as they monitor large and small governments around the 
world. These missions are the key to forcing governments to conform to the 
‘rules of the game’ as established by the global monetary elites.

Ahamed had difficulty getting the cooperation of the IMF and access to IMF 
meetings and missions he needed to write the book. In the opening section, he 
writes, he soon discovers that gaining access to the world behind its doors 
will not be easy. The fund is the repository of many secrets, which it guards 
ferociously. It does its work behind the scenes, out of the public eye, and has 
a history of being wary of the press… The fund benefits from a certain mystique 
that could be lost by too much openness.

In the end, Ahamed was granted access by IMF Managing Director Christine 
Lagarde. What follows is a revealing account that is part history, part 
economics and part James Bond as Ahamed travels from Washington to Tokyo, 
Dublin, and Maputo, Mozambique. He describes IMF interactions with other 
members of the global power elite, as well as the IMF’s member countries in 
both the developed world and among the poorest.

Importantly, the book is highly accessible. Ahamed avoids the arcane jargon 
that fills most accounts of the IMF as well as the IMF’s official publications 
and reports. Anyone with the slightest interest in the workings of the 
international monetary system will find this book an excellent guide to how the 
IMF goes about its business on a day-to-day basis, and how the IMF has the 
power to make or break sovereign governments by deciding whether or not to make 
loans when those governments are in financial distress.

One of the book’s main takeaways is the demonstration that the IMF is just as 
powerful as the military and CIA when it comes to forcing regime change in 
governments that do not follow US orders. Of course, the IMF does this without 
firing a shot. They use money as a weapon just as effectively as the military 
uses special operations or the CIA uses drones.

Second, if Western nations lose votes in the IMF and those votes are given to 
communist China, then the IMF money weapons may be aimed at the US in the 
future.

In recent decades, the emerging markets and southern Europe have needed IMF 
bailouts. In the future, the US may be the one that needs to be bailed out, and 
we may have to accept conditions imposed by China using the IMF as its monetary 
agent.

The book is also timely. While the IMF has always been opaque, its importance 
to global finance has waxed and waned over the decades. Now the IMF is about to 
enter its most powerful stage yet.

Central banks bailed out the world in 2008. The next financial panic will be 
bigger than the ability of central banks to put out the fire. At that point, 
the only source of global liquidity will be the IMF itself.

The issuance of five trillion SDRs, equal to US$7.5 trillion, to paper over the 
next financial panic will be highly inflationary. The difference between this 
coming inflation and those in the past is that few investors will know where 
the inflation is coming from.

Politically, it will not be easy to hold the US Treasury or the Federal Reserve 
accountable, because they will just point a finger at the IMF.

The one true advantage of SDRs is that very few people understand them, and 
there’s no political accountability.

Understanding the financial world’s fire department before the next great fire 
will give you an advantage when it comes.

Cheers,

Jim Rickards,

For The Daily Reckoning

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published in The Daily Reckoning US 
http://click2.portphillippublishing.com.au/t/FA/Fdc/KX8/AAmANg/G_E/AASMFA/AQ/jN09
 .

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