-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Sid Shniad
Sent: Friday, February 04, 2011 11:08 AM
Subject: IMF raises spectre of civil wars as global inequalities worsen


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/globalbusiness/8296987/IMF-raises-spectre
-of-civil-wars-as-global-inequalities-worsen.html


Daily Telegraph
1 Feb 2011 

IMF raises spectre of civil wars as global inequalities worsen


The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned that "dangerous" imbalances
have emerged that threaten to derail global recovery and stoke tensions that
may ultimately set off civil wars in deeply unequal countries. 

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/>  


Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the IMF's chief, said the economic rebound across
the world is built on unstable foundations, with many rich nations still
strapped in job slumps while the rising powers of China, India and Brazil
already facing the threat of overheating. "It is not the recovery we wanted.
It is a recovery beset by tensions and strain, which could even sow the
seeds of the next crisis," he said. 

"Global unemployment remains at record highs, with widening income
inequality adding to social strains," he said, citing turmoil in North
Africa as a prelude to what may happen as 400m youths join the workforce
over the next decade. "We could see rising social and political instability
within nations - even war," he said. 

The IMF has published a paper entitled Inequality, Leverage and Crisis
arguing that the extreme gap between rich and poor - with echoes of the US
in the late 1920s - was an underlying cause of the Great Recession from
2008-2009. 

The paper, by the Fund's modelling unit, warned of "disastrous consequences"
for the world economy unless workers regain their "bargaining power" against
rentiers. It suggests radical changes to the tax system and debt relief for
workers. 

Mr Strauss-Kahn said the toxic global imbalances that caused the financial
crisis are re-emerging, naming China and Germany as the two arch-sinners
that rely on export surpluses to power growth at the expense of the US and
other deficit countries. 

"The most important question is to deal with the recurrent problem of some
countries' large external surpluses," he said, warning that failure to curb
excesses will lead to global clashes and rising protectionism in trade and
finance. 

In a veiled warning to China and other countries holding down their
currencies for commercial advantage, the IMF chief said "exchange-rate
adjustment should not be resisted". Nor should capital controls be imposed
to stop the inflow of funds. 

The comments appear to align the IMF behind Washington in the simmering
dispute over the declining dollar. China and Brazil have accused the US of
covert currency warfare through quantitative easing, but the claim is
slippery since the US has a huge structural trade deficit. 

Mr Strauss-Kahn also hinted that parts of Asia are exceeding the safe speed
limit for growth and needed to "tighten" further before inflation gets out
of control. "There are risks of overheating, and even a hard landing," he
said. 




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