---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 1998 12:40:09 -0500 (EST)
From: Robert Weissman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Multiple recipients of list STOP-IMF <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Japan to propose new int'l financial body

Japan to propose global body for financial supervision: report
Date: Sun Nov 01 01:42:10 CST 1998

   TOKYO, Nov 1 (AFP) - Japan will propose to the other Group of Seven
(G7) economic powers the creation of an international financial
supervisory body to stop speculators disrupting markets, a report said
Sunday. 
   Japan's draft proposal says the body could be founded by integrating
the supervisory divisions of the International Monetary Fund, the World
Bank and the Bank for International Settlements, the Nihon Keizai
Shimbun said. 
   The newspaper said Tokyo would make the proposal at a meeting of the
G7 deputy finance ministers and central bank governors expected this
month, with the aim of having it agreed at a G7 summit in Germany next
June. 
   In a joint statement issued last week the seven heads of government
called for a new framework for the next century to stabilise the world's
increasingly interlinked economies. 
   The G7 groups Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the
United States. 
   Japan says the organisation would promote information exchanges and
technical cooperation among countries' financial authorities, monitor
cross-border investors and collect data on capital flows, the paper
said. 
   The body would require hedge funds to disclose information if they
disrupt markets while tightening regulation on financial institutions
putting up money for such funds as well as invitations for investment in
them, it said. 
   As for the IMF reform, Japan will propose the IMF set up a new
lending scheme to provide liquidity quickly to countries in trouble and
be able to raise funds in markets for prompt loans, the paper said. 
   The G7 statement last week backed the creation of a special facility
within the Fund to provide emergency credits to countries that are not
in crisis but are nonetheless threatened by devaluation and economic
weakness elsewhere. 
   The Nihon Keizai added Japan called for the creation of regional
funds in such blocks as Asia and Europe to complement the
Washington-based IMF. 
   Japan will also propose integrating debt guarantee functions at World
Bank institutions under the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency to
back bonds issued by developing countries, the paper said. 
   Japan also wants to limit the IMF's involvement in reforming
structural problems of troubled countries as the Fund's stringent fiscal
policies caused some social unrest in Asia, it said. 
   Japan says the IMF should recognise the diversity of individual
countries' history, culture and stage of economic development and avoid
hurting confidence by demanding a sweeping, drastic reform, it said. 
   The proposal is expected to be a starting point for international
discussions to reform the IMF-led postwar monetary system to better cope
with the new environment such as fast 
cross-border flows of money, it said.



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