http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/6F8030C7-CB7A-4362-A962-EA1396D0434E.htm


*World Bank and IMF face criticism*

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank are meeting in
Washington this weekend with both bodies facing renewed criticism.
Developing nations are angry at their lack of representation on the IMF's
board while the World Bank is facing questions over what role it should play
in the global financial system.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, a former French foreign minister who takes over as
IMF head on November 1, has pledged to make a series of changes during his
leadership.
However, on Friday, developing countries dismissed the pace of democratic
reforms in the IMF as "disappointing and unacceptable."

Voting power

The Group of 24 (G24) developing countries reiterated its call for a greater
voice and democratic representation on the IMF's board.

The group, which includes Argentina, Egypt and Venezuela, make up the
majority of the IMF's membership but have little say over its decisions.

A G24 statement said: "A significant redistribution of voting power in
favour of emerging market and developing countries as a group should be the
overarching objective of the reform.

"The proposals tabled to date are disappointing and unacceptable as they
fall far short of the reform's fundamental goals."

New order

The criticism comes amid a change in leadership at both institutions, with
Rodrigo Rato, the IMF's managing director, leaving at the end of the month
and Robert Zoellick having become World Bank president three months ago.

With the increasing financial resources of countries such as China, which
has lent millions of dollars, without conditions, to areas such as Africa,
the bank is faces continuing doubts about its role in helping poor
countries.

The organisation is also often seen as a puppet of the White House.

In an effort to increase the financial independence of South American
countries, Venezuela, which recently paid off its debts to the World Bank,
has instigated a new bank which will help finance the region called Banco
del Sur or the 'Bank of the South.'

Meanwhile, the World Bank's efforts to attract money from developed
countries in order to help tackle poverty were hit by a scandal earlier this
year involving Paul Wolfowitz, its former president.

Wolfowitz was forced from office over his handling of a large pay raise for
a bank employee with whom he was having a relationship.

Precarious finances

The IMF is also facing criticism of its own financial management.

The organisation has traditionally been the lender of last resort for
troubled economies, but interest from its loans are drying up as potential
borrowers turn to other easier sources of cash.

Earlier this week the IMF suffered the indignity of a sharp warning about
its precarious finances from ratings agency Standard and Poor's.
The agency's report said the global institution "will continue to lose
money, and risk hampering its ability to perform its role in the future, if
it fails to restore its finances."

The IMF lost about $110m in the fiscal year ending April 30 2007 "and on
current trends will lose twice that amount in the fiscal year 2008," said
John Chambers, chairman of Standard and Poor's sovereign rating committee.

Protests

Meanwhile, an anti-globalization march in Washington aimed at the IMF and
World Bank meeting turned violent on Friday evening, with shop windows
smashed and one woman injured.

Crowds waiving banners, who were protesting at what they see as the harmful
policies of the financial bodies, marched peacefully at first in the
Georgetown area before violence erupted.

Police came out in force with riot masks and batons and ordered the crowds
to disperse.
Quentin Peterson, a police spokesman, said that one young woman had been
taken to hospital for an injury after she was hit in the face by a brick.

Local television reported that two clothing stores' windows were smashed.
The marchers had headed west to Georgetown's shopping area after they were
unable to get close to the IMF and World Bank headquarters in the heart of
the city.

October Rebellion, the campaign group that organised the protest, accused
the IMF and World Bank on its website of harming the poor through their
"neoliberal" loan policies.


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