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01 October 2013

IMF's 2013 Annual Report: Promoting a More Secure and Stable Global Economy


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"The global economy is in better shape, but the road to a robust and comprehensive recovery remains bumpy", says IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde in an introduction to the institution's Annual Report.


“Decisive actions by policymakers during the year successfully defused the most immediate risks to the global economy”, observes Lagarde in her foreword to the International Monetary Fund’s Annual Report 2013: Promoting a More Secure and Stable Global Economy. But global growth remains too weak and too uneven, while in far too many countries, “improvements in financial markets have not translated into improvements in the real economy—and in the lives of people". She also points to a “need for concerted action” for which the IMF shares responsibility with its 188 member countries.

IMF financing continued to be an important source of support for member countries during the year, as the effects of the global financial crisis persisted and some countries in the euro area remained vulnerable. A substantial part of the financing—90 per cent—went to three euro area countries (Greece, Ireland and Portugal) hit particularly hard by the crisis. The IMF’s Executive Board approved 14 new or augmented arrangements during the year, for a total of US$113.9 billion; nine of these arrangements were on a concessional basis to low-income members under the IMF’s Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust. The institution also took steps to ensure the adequacy of its resources for providing such financing, including approval of a strategy to ensure sustainability of the Trust over the longer term.

During the year, the report notes, the IMF took steps to reform its core responsibility of surveillance—its oversight of member countries’ economic and financial policies—according to priorities identified in a triennial review conducted in 2011. Most notable was a decision on bilateral and multilateral surveillance adopted in July 2012, to better integrate IMF monitoring of the global economy with its oversight of country economies. It also adopted a strategy for financial surveillance to improve risk identification, strengthen instruments for integrated policy responses to risks, and improve impact by boosting its engagement with stakeholders.

Press release

Full report



© International Monetary Fund


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