IMF Backpedals on Austerity
IMF head Christine Lagarde issues shift, says sometimes it's better to "go a little bit more slowly"
The draconian austerity measures issued to debt-stricken countries should be eased, the head of the International Monetary Fund admitted on Thursday, marking a shift in the policies the "troika" member has been pushing.
Sometimes it's better to "go a little bit more slowly" in implementing the measures, and countries should "let the automatic stabilizers operate," Lagarde stated.
The Telegraph explains further that Lagarde's emphasis is now not on "specific debt reduction targets but focus on implementing reforms."
Lagarde's statements come days after the IMF issued its World Economic Outlook. Reuters reports:
The IMF released new research this week showing that fiscal consolidation has a much sharper negative effect on growth than previously thought. Since the global financial crisis, these so-called fiscal multipliers have been as much as three times larger than they were before 2009, the IMF research shows.Financial observer Yves Smith remarks that the IMF now recognizing the failure of these policies is "too little, too late," and "is tantamount to loosening a tourniquet once gangrene has set in."
That means aggressive austerity measures may inflict deep economic wounds that make it harder for an economy to get out from under heavy debt burdens.
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The IMF's Christine Lagarde spoke with CNN, explaining the Troika's review of the austerity plan.IMF chief: Austerity is hurting growth
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