With every attempt to introduce another layer of beaurocracy to "fix" distortions in the market caused by previous layers, keynesian economics begins to look downright silly. Now an unelected body is supposed to decide how the global market is to operate.
There's no such thing as 'excess reserves' any more than there are excess brain cells.
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US Treasury Secretary: IMF Must Strengthen Forex Surveillance
WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner Saturday called for the International Monetary Fund to strengthen its surveillance of exchange rate and reserve accumulation policies.
In a clear reference to China, the secretary said precautionary reserve build-up is appropriate "to a point," Geithner told the IMF's advisory body, the International Monetary and Financial Committee, in prepared remarks.
"However, excess reserve accumulation on a global scale is leading to serious distortions in the international monetary and financial system, and is inhibiting the international adjustment process," he said.
There's growing frustration in the U.S., Japan and Europe that Beijing is move too slow in its planned currency reform, a politically fractious issue taking center stage at the annual IMF and World Bank annual meetings this weekend and exacerbated by a rising risk of a subsequent barrage of competitive devaluations across the globe.
"The IMF must increase the candor of its surveillance," he said, referring to chagrin over soft rhetoric the IMF has used in reports describing the currency problems.
The U.S. has tried soft diplomacy, tough rhetoric and the House of Representatives has even passed legislation that would slap tariffs on imports from countries, such as China, that undervalue their currency. But Wednesday, the Treasury secretary said it was counterproductive for the U.S. to bear the diplomatic burden alone, and urged international support through multilateral organizations such as the IMF.
IMF Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn said Thursday that the fund needed to launch a "systemic stability initiative" that would strengthen surveillance.
Geithner said in his remarks, "An upgrade of the analytical tools for evaluating reserve holdings is long overdue."
In a separate matter, Geithner said international governments must continue to work together to protect the financial system against fraud and terrorist financing, in particular highlighting Iran.
"Maintaining the integrity of the international financial system requires all of us to work together to rigorously implement these countermeasures against Iran," he said.
http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-201 ... 00781.html