The International Monetary Fund will systematically address
corruption and its impact on economic growth with all its member
countries under new guidelines launched on Sunday.
The
stricter new policy also aims to tackle how rich countries contribute to
corruption in the developing world by failing to prevent bribery and
money laundering or by allowing anonymous corporate ownership.
"We
know that corruption hurts the poor, hinders economic opportunity and
social mobility, undermines trust in institutions and causes social
cohesion to unravel," IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said in a
statement.
"We have now adopted a framework for
enhanced engagement on governance and corruption that aims for a more
systematic, evenhanded, effective and candid engagement with member
countries."
Corruption and poor governance sap economic growth and
exacerbate inequality, according to the IMF, and the new policy
framework attempts to ensure the institution will hold all members to
the same standards -- something the fund said it had not always done.
The
new policy comes as Ukrainian authorities work to implement stringent
new anticorruption reforms at the behest of the IMF, which has held up
the latest instalment of a $17.5 billion aid package.
The
revised good governance guidelines, which take effect on July 1, follow
a recent review of the IMF's 20-year-old policy framework which
concluded the fund had sometimes employed euphemisms when discussing
corruption in member states -- leaving local officials unclear about IMF
concerns.
'More intrusive'
And IMF analysis sometimes failed to apply the same standards evenly to all members.
Under
the new guidelines approved by the IMF board on April 6, the fund will
discuss good governance concerns in all annual economic reviews of
member countries.
IMF officials however say they do not
expect the policy will lead to more stringent conditions on loans,
which go to a minority of the fund's 189 members and which already
include anti-corruption provisions.
The fund also will
rely on the findings of outside transparency campaigners who have
criticized the existence of tax and corporate havens in advanced
economies as a conduit for illicit financial flows to and from poorer
countries.
However, the IMF will not investigate specific instances of corruption.
Rather,
it will focus on the strength of key economic institutions: fiscal and
central bank governance, market regulation, the rule of law and policies
on money laundering and countering terrorism financing.
IMF
analysis suggests falling 25 notches on a corruption index could shave
as much as 0.5 percentage points off a country's annual growth --
amounting to tremendous economic losses over multiple years.
In
unveiling the new policy on Sunday at the close of the IMF-World Bank
spring meetings, Lagarde said the fund's board supported a "more
intrusive" approach to member state evaluations.
"Because
it is a macroeconomic issue, the IMF is really perfectly legitimate in
acting, especially when we have a program in a country," she said.
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