IMF's Lagarde warns protectionism, while now just words,
may come to hurt Asia
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[November 08, 2017]
By Leika Kihara and Takashi Umekawa
TOKYO (Reuters) - Protectionist sentiment
has not yet gone beyond mere words, International Monetary Fund Managing
Director Christine Lagarde said on Wednesday, but would hurt Asian
economies with open and free markets if it did.
Lagarde brushed off the concerns of some investors that the divergent
monetary paths of major central banks could disrupt Asian capital flows,
stressing that policymakers had the tools and means of communication
needed to prevent market upheaval.
Global policymakers have raised concerns over U.S. President Donald
Trump's "America First" agenda that aims to slash U.S. trade deficits,
via which Washington appears to be walking away from or extensively
renegotiating multilateral trade arrangements in favour of
country-by-country deals.
Lagarde said that while protectionism had not so far been seen "other
than in words", trade deals must be improved in a way that included
people who felt left behind by globalization.
"If there was protectionism, it would hurt economies that are very open,
and based on free and fair movement of goods and services," Lagarde told
Reuters during a visit for the 20th anniversary of the IMF's
Asia-Pacific regional office in Tokyo.
"To continue to have trade as a global engine for growth, trade deals
need to be improved," she said, adding trade pacts had to include rules
on labor practices and intellectual property.
Lagarde said trade deals must be "rules based" and make use of existing
dispute-settlement mechanisms such as the World Trade Organization,
though she declined to say whether Trump's trade policies complied with
these rules.
The IMF head said there had been no massive capital outflows from Asia
thanks to central bankers' cautious approach and clear communication
around their policy shifts.
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International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Christine
Lagarde attends a seminar to mark 20th anniversary of the launch of
IMF's Asia-Pacific Office, in Tokyo, Japan November 8, 2017.
REUTERS/Issei Kato
"We believe these conditions can help to ensure that monetary policy changes do
not provoke unnecessary capital flow movements," she said.
Lagarde said she would draw a "slight distinction" between the pace of policy
shifts to be adopted by the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank.
She noted that the Fed was expected to raise interest rates steadily in coming
months, while the European Central Bank had stressed that its quantitative
easing would continue and interest rates would remain low for a long period of
time.
"You can't put the two - the Fed and the ECB - in the same basket," she said.
Lagarde said Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda was acting appropriately by
pledging to maintain the BOJ's massive stimulus program until inflation
accelerates.
"One of the strengths of central bankers is to be very clear in their
communication and determined in their resolve, which clearly Governor Kuroda has
demonstrated," she said.
"One thing that is unanimously recognized is his resolve and clear determination
to stay the course and to adjust when the circumstances would so require."
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Takashi Umekawa; Editing by Eric Meijer)
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