Page 259 - DMGT401Business Environment
P. 259

Business Environment




                    Notes          12.1.3 Organization of IMF

                                   The IMF  is accountable  to its  member countries,  and this accountability  is  essential to  its
                                   effectiveness.
                                   The day-to-day work of the IMF is carried out by an Executive Board, representing the IMF's 184
                                   members, and an internationally recruited staff under the leadership of a Managing Director
                                   and three Deputy Managing Directors – each member of this management team being drawn
                                   from a different region of the world.
                                   The powers of the Executive Board to conduct the business of the IMF are delegated to it by the
                                   Board of Governors, which is where ultimate oversight rests.

                                   Board of Governors

                                   The Board of Governors are represented by all member countries and it is the highest authority
                                   governing the IMF. It usually meets once a year, at the Annual Meetings of the IMF and the
                                   World Bank. Each member country  appoints a Governor – usually the country's minister  of
                                   finance or the governor of its central bank – and an Alternate Governor. The Board of Governors
                                   decides on major policy issues but has delegated day-to-day decision-making to the Executive
                                   Board.

                                   Executive Board

                                   It consists of 24 Executive Directors, with the Managing Director as Chairman. The Executive
                                   Board usually meets three times a week, in full-day sessions, and more often if needed, at the
                                   organization's headquarters in Washington, D.C.  The IMF's  five largest  shareholders –  the
                                   United States, Japan, Germany, France, and the United Kingdom – along with China, Russia, and
                                   Saudi Arabia, have their own seats on the Board. The other 16 Executive Directors are elected for
                                   two-year terms by groups of countries, known as constituencies.
                                   Key policy issues relating to the international monetary system are considered twice-yearly in
                                   a committee of Governors called the International Monetary and Financial Committee, (IMFC)
                                   (until September 1999 known as the Interim Committee). A joint committee of the Boards of
                                   Governors of the IMF and World Bank called the Development Committee advises and reports
                                   to the Governors on development policy and other matters of concern to developing countries.

                                   Managing Director

                                   The Executive Board selects the Managing Director, who besides serving as the chairman of the
                                   Board, is the chief of the IMF staff and conducts the business of the IMF under the direction of the
                                   Executive Board. Appointed for a renewable five-year term, the Managing Director is assisted
                                   by a First Deputy Managing Director and two other Deputy Managing Directors.
                                   IMF employees are international civil servants whose responsibility is to the IMF, not to national
                                   authorities. The organization has about 2,800 employees recruited from 141 countries. About
                                   two-thirds of their professional staff are economists. The IMF's 26 departments and offices are
                                   headed by directors, who report to the Managing Director.  Most staff work in Washington,
                                   although about 90 resident representatives are posted in member countries to help advise on
                                   economic policy. The IMF maintains offices in Paris and Tokyo for liaison with other international
                                   and regional institutions, and with organizations of civil society. It also has offices in New York
                                   and Geneva, mainly for liaison with other institutions in the UN system.







          252                               LOVELY PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY
   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264