Financial Times FT.com

The Fund must be a global asset manager

By Michael Bordo and Harold James

Published: October 20 2008 18:43 | Last updated: October 20 2008 18:43

The chaotic, costly and ineffective international response to the current financial disorder has prompted French president Nicolas Sarkozy, British prime minister Gordon Brown and German president Horst Köhler, a former head of the International Monetary Fund, to call for a new Bretton Woods conference to design a new global financial system.

This is the first big crisis since the Bretton Woods conference in 1944, when the IMF was created, when the Fund has stood on the sidelines. Yet the origins of the crisis lie in some of the areas where it has a direct mandate – in particular, the large current account imbalances – as well as in the areas where it has recently been extending its mandate to cover financial stability.

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