The International Monetary Fund should sharpen its focus on currency exchange rate surveillance, challenges posed by sovereign wealth funds and supporting global financial market stability, US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said today.
Mr Paulson said the IMF, in implementing a new surveillance regime, must use clear analytics and make strong judgements on exchange rate policies, "particularly where currencies are not set by market forces in deep, liquid markets."
"The IMF's implementation of the new surveillance decision is still a work in progress," he said in prepared remarks before the IMF's steering committee in Washington. "Strengthened implementation of this core mandate is integral to IMF legitimacy; insufficient progress would put success of the broader modernization effort at risk."
Mr Paulson also repeated his long-standing call for continued progress in reforming the IMF's governing structure, including a smaller, more streamlined board, with gradual reductions to 20 seats from 24 currently by 2012.
"The board is simply too costly and a smaller and more streamlined board could focus more strategically on the management of the institution and less on the voluminous crush of papers," he said.
Mr Paulson welcomed the IMF's work on development of a set of best practices for rapidly growing sovereign wealth funds, and said it was important for the fund to work with both sovereign wealth fund countries and countries receiving the investments.
The US Treasury secretary also said he supported the recommendations of the multi-nation Financial Stability Forum, unveiled yesterday, to improve risk management, accounting, valuation of structured products, credit rating agencies and other responses to stress in the financial system.
As a member of the FSF, the IMF should report information on financial stability risks to the forum and then incorporate the FSF's conclusions into its currency surveillance work, Mr Paulson said.
Regarding the global economy, Paulson said 2008 will be "more difficult" than recent years, with "headwinds coming from adjustments in the U.S. economy, financial market stress, and higher than desirable inflation."
He said he was confident about long term US prospects and the resilience of capital markets, but "we must expect more bumps in the road."