Full letter (pdf)
European Department
Washington DC
June 18, 2012
Washington DC
June 18, 2012
To Mr. Shaalan, Dean of the IMF Executive Board
Today, I addressed the Executive Board for the last time—because I am leaving the Fund.
Accordingly, I wanted first to formally express my deep appreciation
to the Swedish, Israeli, and Danish authorities with whom I have worked
recently, as well as all others with whom I have worked earlier, for
their extraordinary generosity towards me personally.
But I also wanted to take this opportunity to explain my departure.
After twenty years of service, I am ashamed to have had any association with the Fund at all.
This is not solely because of the incompetence that was partly
chronicled by the OIA report into the global crisis and the TSR report
on surveillance ahead of the Euro Area crisis. Moreso, it is because the
substantive difficulties in these crises, as with others, were
identified well in advance but were suppressed here. Given long
gestation periods and protracted international decision-making processes
to head off both these global challenges, timely sustained warnings
were of the essence. So the failure of the Fund to issue them is a
failing of the first order, even if such warnings may not have been
heeded. The consequences include suffering (and risk of worse to come)
for many including Greece, that the second global reserve currency is on
the brink, and that the Fund for the past two years has been playing
catch-up and reactive roles in the last-ditch efforts to save it.
Further, the proximate factors which produced these failings of IMF
surveillance—analytical risk aversion, bilateral priority, and European
bias—are, if anything, becoming more deeply entrenched, notwithstanding
initiatives which purport to address them. This fact is most clear in
regard to appointments for Managing Director which, over the past
decade, have all-too-evidently been disastrous. Even the current
incumbent is tainted, as neither her gender, integrity, or élan can make
up for the fundamental illegitimacy of the selection process. In a
hierarchical place like this, the implications of those choices filter
directly to others in senior management, and via the appointments, fixed
term contracts, and succession planning of senior staff, they go on to
infuse the organization as a whole, overwhelming everything else. A
handicapped Fund, subject to those proximate roots of surveillance
failure, is what the Executive Board prefers. Would that I had
understood twenty years ago that this would be the choice.
There are good salty people here. But this one is moving on. You might want to take care not to lose the others.
cc. Ms. Nemat Shafik
Mr. Stanley Fischer
Mr. Stephan Ingves
Mr. Benny Andersen
Mr. Alex Gibbs
Mr. Eric Meyer
Mr. Amit Friedman
Mr. Martin Holmberg
Mr. Reza Moghadam
Mr. Mark Plant
Mr. Brad McDonald
Mr. Stanley Fischer
Mr. Stephan Ingves
Mr. Benny Andersen
Mr. Alex Gibbs
Mr. Eric Meyer
Mr. Amit Friedman
Mr. Martin Holmberg
Mr. Reza Moghadam
Mr. Mark Plant
Mr. Brad McDonald
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