CBCnews
 
New licensing option: POST all or part of this article on a web site, intranet or blog.

IMF mulls bank-failure insurance

Last Updated: Friday, October 2, 2009 | 4:13 PM ET

The International Monetary Fund is open to a plan that would see banks contribute to an insurance policy against a future economic collapse, the agency revealed on Friday.

"Considering that the financial sector is creating a lot of systemic risk for the global economy," said the fund's managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, "it is just fair that such a sector would pay some part of its resources to help mitigate the risks that they are creating."

Dominique Strauss-Kahn mulled making banks pay into an insurance fund to mitigate the risks they create, the IMF director said Friday.Dominique Strauss-Kahn mulled making banks pay into an insurance fund to mitigate the risks they create, the IMF director said Friday. (Burhan Ozbilici/Associated Press)

Deputy director John Lipsky has been dispatched to head a task force to look at what measures would be appropriate.

The lack of an adequate insurance facility for the global economy has led many emerging markets to self-insure by building excessively large buffers of foreign reserves. There are fears that has contributed to global financial instability by creating widening wealth disparities.

The fund did not release details of what form the insurance fund might take, but Strauss-Kahn stopped well short of backing plans for a so-called Tobin tax — a flat tax on currency transactions named after the Nobel Prize laureate James Tobin.

Tobin first made his proposal in the early 1970s when U.S. President Richard Nixon ended the dollar's convertibility to gold and effectively brought an end to the global currency system that had prevailed since the Second World War.

Tobin said the tax would help limit instability arising from a world of floating exchange rates such as the one in which the world finds itself today.

At a summit of G20 leaders in Pittsburgh last week, the IMF was asked to come up with proposals for some sort of global bank insurance fund.

"We're going to be asking the question: Is there a fair, equitable and efficient way to think about charging the financial system for the potential costs of insuring the system, in the way that banks typically pay for deposit insurance on their depositors?" he said.

"[But] the very simple idea of putting a tax on transactions won't work for many technical reasons," Strauss-Kahn said Friday in Istanbul, where the IMF is holding its annual meeting.

Calls for 'Tobin tax'

Oxfam, which has been pushing for a flat tax on currency transactions, welcomed the IMF's plan to look at the issue even though cold water was poured on the idea of a Tobin tax.

"Strauss-Kahn said that it was fair to expect the banks to pay for clearing up the mess they've created," Max Lawson, international policy adviser at Oxfam, told The Associated Press. "A financial transaction tax is the only way to do it."

Lawson said a 0.005 per cent tax on currency transactions in major economies could raise $30 billion a year and that any rescue package for countries should include such a tax.

In his remarks, Strauss-Kahn again warned against the dangers of premature withdrawal of fiscal stimulus from the world's central banks.

And he warned that export-dependent countries need to focus on domestic demand as United States consumers show signs of eschewing their spendthrift ways and begin to pad savings.

The fund also mused Friday about increased funding to assist poorer countries — the "innocent victims of the crisis" — in the battle against climate change.

With files from The Associated Press
  •  
 
New licensing option: POST all or part of this article on a web site, intranet or blog.
 

Money Headlines

Alberta budget includes $4.75B deficit
Alberta's Progressive Conservative government is projecting a record $4.75-billion deficit, planning cuts to many departments while managing to increase health-care spending.
Toyota recall spreads to Prius and beyond Video
Toyota is recalling 437,000 Prius and other hybrid cars worldwide to fix brake problems — the latest embarrassing safety defect for the world's largest automaker.
Tech buying bounces back in 2009: NPD
Canadians spent $4.66 billion on computer and information technology products in 2009, up one per cent from 2008.
Intrawest to sell stake in Florida resort
Vancouver-based Intrawest ULC said Tuesday it has reached a deal to sell its interests in Florida's Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort.
Jazz buys 15 Bombardier planes
Halifax-based Jazz Air LP has signed a deal to buy 15 Bombardier Q400 NextGen aircraft, the airline announced Tuesday.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Trenton colonel's charges spur cold case review Video
The 2001 slaying of a Nova Scotia woman at CFB Trenton in eastern Ontario is among the cases being re-examined after murder charges were laid against Col. Russell Williams.
Alberta budget includes $4.75B deficit Video
Alberta's Progressive Conservative government is projecting a record $4.75-billion deficit, planning cuts to many departments while managing to increase health-care spending.
Ottawa to appeal injection site ruling Video
The federal government is asking the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal a lower court ruling that sanctioned Vancouver's supervised drug injection site.
Haiti man pulled from rubble Video
A 28-year-old man has been pulled from rubble in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, claiming to have been trapped there since the massive earthquake on Jan. 12.
Tories need plan for isotope shortage: Ignatieff
Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff accused the Conservative government of having no plan of action to deal with a medical isotope shortage expected to worsen later this month.