Kahn is what's known in Socialist circles as a "centrist" with moderate-conservative views. When he was Minister, he implemented quite a few neo-liberal policies. You do the math on that one. He's been angling for the Presidency since 2005. Unfortunately for him, "La base ne veut pas de ce faux socialiste!" Another
comment to the same article which needs no translation, but says it all "DSK est un homme TRES INTELLIGENT-PRAGMATIQUE-REALISTE". Where have we heard that before?
It is important at this stage to clarify Strauss-Kahn's basic outlook. He seeks to purge the party of Marxism. The French socialists, rebranded as "social democrats", would officially endorse markets and reject the supremacy of the state in economic matters. But that does mean that it would break all ties with the radicals. "France has always had a creative utopian left, and we could have electoral alliances with them", Jean-Marie Le Guen says. Strauss-Kahn and his supporters, in other words, would still be with the Marxists, just not of them.
http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization-institutions_government/lost_left_4672.jsp But to be fair to Kahn, you should know that Sarkozy named him to the IMF to get him out of the way and pretend he was going to be working with the Left.
Here is an interesting write up on Kahn
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When Sarkozy nominated Strauss Kahn as managing director of the IMF in 2007, the president must have thought he had sidelined a rival for good.
The IMF was sliding into irrelevance, its advice largely ignored and its loans seen as unnecessary in a world flush with private capital.
The fund’s lending commitments had shrunk to a paltry $2 billion, which meant that it barely took in enough interest to meet its own costs.
Today that situation has been transformed, partly because of the global financial crisis and partly because of Strauss-Kahn’s shrewd leadership.
His Keynesian instincts have proved to be in tune with the times, shedding the IMF’s reputation as a bastion of hardcore neoliberalism.
Some people have even compared the fund to a world government, with the suave and fatherly Frenchman as its benign dictator.
With typical modesty, Strauss-Kahn (or DSK as he is popularly known) has claimed that in 2010 he pushed through ‘‘the most important reforms in the governance of the IMF since its creation’’.
He may very well be correct. First, Strauss-Kahn has spearheaded new procedures that allowed the IMF to dole out large sums very quickly and have increased its loan book to almost $200 billion.
Often criticised for imposing a ‘‘one sizefits-all’’ model, the fund is now much more sensitive in tailoring flexible packages to suit a country’s individual needs.
By trusting governments to make the necessary economic adjustments on their own, it is hoped that this will gradually reduce the stigma attached to asking for outside help.
Secondly, Strauss-Kahn has given emerging economies in Asia and Latin America a much greater say in how the institution is run.
After decades of domination By Washington and Brussels, the combined voting power of the US and the EU is set to fall below 50 per cent for the first time.
The new rules will also take account of countries’ growth rates, which means that African nations can aspire to greater influence if their economic performance improves.
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http://www.insidegov.org/?p=450