WASHINGTON — The International Monetary
Fund said on Thursday it was ready to lend to countries hit by
the global credit crunch and had activated an emergency
financing mechanism first used in the 1990s Asian crisis.
The Fund already sent a mission to Iceland,
where the government has seized control of its largest bank,
and has warned that the worst financial crisis since the 1930s
Great Depression could inflict lasting economic harm on the
world.
"Yesterday I activated emergency procedures
of the IMF to respond quickly," IMF Managing Director
Dominique Strauss-Kahn told a news conference. "We are ready
to answer any demand by countries facing problems," he said,
adding that no country is immune from the crisis.
The IMF chief said the IMF was willing to
provide financial assistance not only to emerging and
developing nations, but also to Western countries.
"Nobody knows if some ... advanced
economies will not also be in need of some help by the IMF,"
he said, adding that countries needing to borrow will face
more streamlined conditionality than normal and funding will
be made available quickly. "Very quickly means two weeks at
most," he added.
After several years of no major crises in
emerging economies, the move puts the IMF’s board of member
countries and staff on alert that the Fund will have to
respond quickly if a country needs financial help.
It also puts the global financial
firefighter more at the forefront of the current financial
crisis following months of being on the sidelines.
Panic over toxic, illiquid US mortgage
loans has sapped confidence in financial institutions, forced
governments to pledge hundreds of billions of dollars of
taxpayer money and pushed Western and other central banks to
deliver their first coordinated interest rate cut.
Speaking ahead of IMF and World Bank
meetings of world finance leaders in Washington this weekend,
Strauss-Kahn said the main task for policy-makers was to
restore confidence and calm global markets.
Group of Seven finance ministers and
central bank chiefs also meet in Washington on Friday to
consider their options.
The IMF’s emergency facility was created in
1995 as a way of speeding up the approval of loans to
countries in peril.
It was first used in 1997 to help the
Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea end crushing
runs on their currencies during the Asian financial crisis.
The IMF, which played a central role in the
bailouts of countries in Asia and Latin America in the 1990s,
relied on lending to fund its operations. But with fewer
crises over the years, it had faced a growing income deficit,
prompting an agreement in April to sell some of its gold
stocks and invest profits in government and corporate bonds.
The IMF has about $200 billion immediately
available to lend to countries in need but can tap other
sources. This is small compared to the trillions of dollars
central banks and governments have poured into the financial
system over the past few weeks.
Emerging markets are under pressure again
after strains in the United States and Europe spread.
Investors are fleeing their securities for safer assets,
foreign banks are cutting lending and the countries’ exporters
are braced for weaker demand from Western consumers.
Strauss-Kahn renewed calls for more
coordinated steps to calm panicky markets beyond the
unprecedented simultaneous action of central banks on
Wednesday to cut interest rates.
He said the global economy was on the cusp
of recession but with quick and forceful action, the spreading
crisis could be contained.
"All kinds of cooperation has to be
recommended. All lonely acts have to be avoided, if not
condemned," he said.
His calls for more coordination were backed
by World Bank President Robert Zoellick who said he hoped a
meeting of Group of Seven industrial nations on Friday
(Saturday in Manila) will indicate they "are getting ahead of
the curve."
He said while countries will take different
actions tailored for their own circumstances, they should
coordinate beyond just the G7 members to target the same basic
problems.
"The actions need to be coherent and reinforcing," he said,
referring to Wednesday’s simultaneous rate cut by central
banks. – Reuters