MEDIA STATEMENT
Anti-poverty NGO Jubilee Australia welcomed Prime Minister Rudd’s call overnight for fundamental reform of the international financial architecture, particularly the International Monetary Fund.
Speaking at the Foreign Policy Association in New York last night, Kevin Rudd said: “We would be failing in our duties as leaders at this point in history if we do not revitalize, reform and rebuild the international system”.
Mr. Rudd suggested that at the G20 Conference in Pittsburg, starting today, the IMF should be empowered and its legitimacy increased in order for it to address the problem of global economic imbalances.
While Jubilee Australia welcomed the engagement of the Prime Minister in these issues, it believes that the Prime Minister’s analysis and solutions don’t go far enough. Jubilee Australia spokesperson Professor Ross Buckley* said: “As the report released this week** by Nobel Laureate and former World Bank Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz demonstrated, policies pushed by the IMF have contributed to the severity of the current crisis itself”.
Jubilee Australia believes Mr. Rudd would do well to listen to Professor Stiglitz, whose report not only called for fundamental reform of IMF, but also for greater role for the United Nations in oversight of the Bretton Woods institutions. Under its current structure, the IMF is still under the de facto control of the G7 countries.
Jubilee Australia also welcomed Mr. Rudd’s renewed push for greater transparency in financial markets, and argues that one of the most effective immediate measures to reduce financial market speculation would be the adoption of the financial transaction tax (‘tobin tax’) in Pittsburg this week. ‘A financial transactions tax is a good idea whose time has come’, Professor Buckley said. ‘It can raise enough money to halve global poverty and hunger, improve the workings of important financial markets, and cost you nothing.
‘By dissuading very short-term speculative investments and thus reducing ”white noise” in the market, the tax will allow the market to react to the long-term transactions and function more efficiently. It will essentially be a win-win for markets and for the poor,’ he said.
*Ross Buckley is Professor of International Finance Law in the Faculty of Law, University of NSW.
“Tobin Tax - much needed source of revenue to fight global poverty & hunger", Australian Financial Review 3 September 2009, Ross Buckley,
http://www.jubileeaustralia.org/BlogRetrieve.aspx?BlogID=799&PostID=44555
“The G20’s Missed Opportunity”, Canberra Times / Inside Story 24 August 2009, Ross Buckley, http://inside.org.au/the-g20s-missed-opportunity/
**Report of the Commission of Experts of the President of the United Nations General Assembly on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System September 21, 2009 http://www.un.org/ga/econcrisissummit/docs/FinalReport_CoE.pdf

Comments
Post has no comments.