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						 Fed 
						hikes need to be gradual, risk hurting emerging world: 
						IMF chief 
						
		 
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		[January 13, 2016] 
		By Leigh Thomas and William 
		Schomberg 
						
		PARIS (Reuters) - Further interest rate 
		hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve should be gradual or they risk hurting 
		already fragile emerging economies, where many companies borrow in 
		dollars, the head of the International Monetary Fund said on Tuesday. 
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			 Christine Lagarde said a tightening in U.S. monetary policy, which 
			started last month with the first rate hike in a decade, should be 
			supported by "clear evidence" of inflation in the United States. She 
			highlighted the negative implications for emerging economies. 
			 
			"The key issue going forward will be the pace of normalisation. We 
			agree that it should be gradual as announced, as stressed actually 
			by the Fed, and based on clear evidence of firmer wage or price 
			pressures," she told a central banking conference in Paris. 
			 
			Ebbing confidence in China's policymaking has fuelled investors' 
			retreat from the slowing economy and other emerging markets, which 
			had attracted hundreds of billions of dollars over the previous 
			decade thanks to their superior returns over sluggish developed 
			economies. 
			  
			Lagarde said higher U.S. rates, combined with easing in the euro 
			zone and Japan, could push up the dollar, making life harder for the 
			many companies in emerging economies that borrow in dollars. 
			 
			"For emerging economies, this could raise vulnerabilities in sectors 
			with dollar exposures, especially corporates," Lagarde said. 
			 
			The Chinese yuan has depreciated more than one percent since the 
			start of the year, raising uncertainty over China's intentions 
			regarding the exchange rate and strengthening concerns Beijing might 
			be losing its grip on economic policy, just as the country looks set 
			to post its slowest growth in 25 years. 
			
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			Lagarde warned about further, sharp swings in exchange rates due to 
			uncertainty about economic policy and the pace of the economy. 
			 
			"Beyond dollar appreciation, there is also the potential for 
			increased exchange rate volatility," she said. 
			 
			"This volatility could be induced not only by the divergence in 
			monetary policies in major advanced economies, but also by 
			uncertainty about their overall prospects and policy action." 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Writing by Francesco Canepa 
			in Frankfurt Editing by Jeremy Gaunt) 
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