๐ŸŒ Is the IMF dead?


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Todayโ€™s newsletter:
โ€” Is the IMF dead?
โ€” Intrigueโ€™s weekend tips

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Sponsored by:

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Good morning Intriguer. My grandfather was an IMF economic analyst in Washington DC back in the late 1940s. If there ever was an exciting time to be a central bankerโ€”and he insisted there wasโ€”it was then.

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But of all his stories, one stood out.

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When his Washington posting was ending, he worked the system so he was โ€œforcedโ€ to go home the long way round โ€” a 3-month adventure with โ€œessentialโ€ stops in New York, London, Cairo, Bombay (as it was then known), and Singapore before finally disembarking in Sydney, thoroughly sunned, soothed, and satisfied at having his employer foot the bill for his and my grandmotherโ€™s extended holiday.

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Safe to say all the diplomats in our audience are reading this with a winceโ€”times and taxpayer expectations have changed.

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Anyway, our Washington correspondent Kristen has been bouncing around the IMFโ€™s 2025 meetings in DC this week, so letโ€™s dive into what you need to know.

Is the IMF dead?

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It was a week ago that International Monetary Fund (IMF) head Kristalina Georgieva kicked off the Fundโ€™s DC โ€˜spring meetingsโ€™ with an ominous note โ€” โ€œtrade policy uncertainty is off the chartsโ€.ย 

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You could feel it in the DC air, with Intrigue sources confirming delegations from every corner of the globe were scrambling for meetings with Trumpโ€™s team while in town.

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Or you could just read it in the Fundโ€™s new data, pointing to:ย 

  • A slower global growth forecast (from 3.3% to 2.8%)

  • Slightly stickier inflation (revised back up by 0.1%)

  • Greater odds of a US recession (now 37%, up from ~25%), and

  • Slower growth in China (down to 4% from 5%).

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Why? The Fundโ€™s top French economist put it Frenchly bluntly: itโ€™s โ€œthe abrupt increase in tariffsโ€.

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But with the week now behind us, did the IMF achieve its mission of a) driving more cooperation, b) more trade and growth, and c) discouraging policies that harm prosperity?

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Well, allow us to answer that with four quotes weโ€™ve heard this week: two from the big multilaterals, one from the worldโ€™s largest economy, and one from the business world.

  1. โ€œWe are entering a new era as the global economic system that has operated for the last 80 years is being resetโ€ย โ€” Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, IMF chief economist

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Thatโ€™ll seem obvious for any Intriguer, but for the IMF to lay it out so plainly with thousands of foreign officials there hoping to get a pulse on the markets? Wow.

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But while Franceโ€™s Gourinchas dropped the truth bombs, his boss (Bulgariaโ€™s Georgieva) sprinkled some hope over the rubble, noting finance ministers must now return home and hit play on all the much-needed reforms theyโ€™ve been putting off.

  1. โ€œThe Bretton Woods institutions must step back from their sprawling and unfocused agendas, which have stifled their ability to deliver on their core mandatesโ€ย โ€“ Scott Bessent, US treasury secretary

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Just a day after the IMF unveiled its gloomy outlook, Bessent appeared at DCโ€™s Institute of International Finance and argued the IMF and the World Bank suffer from mission creep (he cited climate change, for example, inviting some pushback from Georgieva).

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Of course, that made headlines as further evidence the US is ditching multilateralism. But the bit that didnโ€™t make headlines came a few moments later in Bessentโ€™s speech, when he flagged that the US wants to โ€œexpand its leadership roleโ€ in the IMF and World Bank.

  1. โ€œWith the policy volatility, you actually undermine the very goal youโ€™re trying to achieveโ€ โ€” Ken Griffin, Citadel founderย 

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While various CEOs in town continued to toe a Trump-friendly line this week, some like Griffin seemed bolder (at least compared to his cautious vibes during the campaign).

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Still, off-stage, business leaders told Intrigue they understand Trumpโ€™s vision to bulk up US industry and rebalance its trade ties โ€” and many believe heโ€™s now gotten the hint about the need to make that shift without whiplashing the markets.

  1. ย โ€œWhat I have seen this week is really a whole collection of the impossible becoming possibleโ€ โ€“ Kristalina Georgieva, IMF managing director

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Wrapping up onstage with ministers from Argentina, the UK, and Germany, the IMF chief was still channelling her inner Oprah (dishing out positivity, not a Prius).

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For example, all four VIP panellists were in furious agreement around one buzzword โ€“ โ€œderegulationโ€. Whether itโ€™s the UK loosening its climate policy, Germany somehow ditching its debt brake, or Argentina somehow stabilising its spending, all agreed on the need for governments to get out of the way.ย 

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A thrilled Georgieva even offered all Germans in the audience a round of applause (not a Prius).

Intrigueโ€™s Take

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With all those vibes in DC, youโ€™d be forgiven if you forgot the weekโ€™s official theme was actually โ€˜Jobs – The Path to Prosperityโ€™. These events are planned months in advance, but nobody was really focused on jobs this week, other than as a by-product of the thing everyone was focused on: tariffs.

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Still, the quote that most grabbed our attention was also the one probably most easily overshadowed: it was Bessentโ€™s pledge for greater US leadership within the very Bretton Woods system (IMF, World Bank) it created in the afterglow of WWII.

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Itโ€™s interesting because it gets at the heart of a dilemma still playing out on the world stage right now โ€” as Chinaโ€™s economy kept growing through the 2000s, the US had to manage two competing priorities:

  • Upholding the credibility of its own creations like the IMF, while also

  • Competing with a rising and changing China.

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The US, for example, supported doubling Chinaโ€™s IMF vote share way back in 2010 (credibility), but delayed its implementation for years (competition).

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Of course, weโ€™ve seen Chinaโ€™s counter-moves, too, pushing its own alternative institutions like the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and its beleaguered BRICS bank.

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We mention all this because it encapsulates the same big tango thatโ€™ll shape our next century, as the US tries to thread between:

  • The risk of blowback if it curbs China too hard, and

  • The risk of losing if it concedes too much.

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Meanwhile, elsewhereโ€ฆ

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๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธย UNITED STATES โ€” China to suspend tariffs on some US goods?
According to Bloomberg, China is mulling tariff exemptions for US goods it needs like medical equipment, industrial chemicals, and plane leases. But the two sides are still publicly clashing on whether theyโ€™re even in talks, with Trump saying yes and China saying no (they both have political incentives to be right). (Bloomberg $)

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Comment:ย Thereโ€™s been plenty of analysis on Americaโ€™s China-dependence, so itโ€™s interesting to see examples of the reverse. Another interesting example of China-dependence? Japan is reportedly resisting US efforts to form a bloc against China, because of the sheer size of Japan-China trade.

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๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณย INDIA โ€” Nuclear-armed foes India and Pakistan still on the brink.
Since Tuesdayโ€™s terrorist attack, Pakistani and Indian forces along their Kashmir border have exchanged fire (no casualties reported). Meanwhile, the tit-for-tat measures have continued, with Pakistan in turn expelling Indian diplomats, cancelling Indian-held visas, closing airspace to Indian airlines, and warning that any halt to Pakistanโ€™s water supplies would be an โ€œact of warโ€. (AFP)

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Comment:ย Our view from yesterday remains unchanged โ€” an Indian airstrike on jihadi bases in remote Pakistan feels inevitable, with Pakistanโ€™s matched responses above underscoring the risk of a miscalculation as they both climb the escalatory ladder.

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๐Ÿ‡ป๐Ÿ‡ฆย VATICAN CITY โ€” Pope frontrunners emerge ahead of Francis funeral.
As world leaders head to the Vatican for the popeโ€™s funeral tomorrow (Saturday), one name doing the rounds as a possible successor is Italyโ€™s own Cardinal Pietro Parolin, a moderate figure and the Vaticanโ€™s current secretary of state. (BBC)

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Comment:ย Of the last six conclaves, the presumed favourite has only emerged as pope once (that was Benedict in 2005). As we explored on Monday, our view is traditional figures might become more influential in the digital and multipolar decades ahead.

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๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆย CANADA: PM Carney on track to win Mondayโ€™s elections?
The most recent polls suggest PM Carneyโ€™s Liberals are on track to win Mondayโ€™s elections, with the conservative opposition a close second. (YouGov)

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๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ตย NORTHERN MARIANAS: The US revives another WWII base.
The US is restoring an 80-year-old military facility on Tinian โ€” itโ€™s the same island from where US B-29s dropped atomic bombs on Imperial Japan during WWII. The refurb is part of US deterrence efforts in the Pacific, though Australiaโ€™s ABC reports locals are now worried about becoming a target in any war. (ABC)

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๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ธย SPAIN: Madrid blocks Israeli arms deal.
Madrid has cancelled a ~$7M deal to buy 15 million bullets from an Israeli supplier. Itโ€™s part of Spainโ€™s halt on any weapons trading with Israel in protest at its war with Hamas. (Politico)

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๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฆย SAUDI ARABIA: Airbus to get its titanium from the Saudis.
Aerospace giant Airbus has announced itโ€™ll source titanium for its planes from Saudi Arabia, as part of a $666M raw materials deal. In exchange, the kingdom has ordered as many as 20 long-range aircraft for its flag carrier. (Gulf News)ย 

Extra Intrigue

Some weekend recommendations from Team Intrigue

Friday quiz

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1) Which of the following is the world’s newest currency?

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2) Which country issued the highest ever denomination banknote?

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3) The British pound is widely considered the world’s oldest currency still in circulation. How old is it?

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