Actually, Wolfowitz is President of the World Bank (where he can
certainly do plenty of harm...). The World Bank's mission, according to their material is:
The World Bank Group’s mission is to fight poverty and improve the living standards of people in the developing world. It is a development Bank which provides loans, policy advice, technical assistance and knowledge sharing services to low and middle income countries to reduce poverty.
Obviously the right spot for Wolfowitz....:sarcasm:
There are some ties between the World Bank and the IMF, but the IMF is a separate institution, whose purpose (again according to their own material) is:
The IMF is the central institution of the international monetary system—the system of international payments and exchange rates among national currencies that enables business to take place between countries.
Traditionally, the US has nominated the president of the World Bank aand the Europeans nominate the IMF Managing Director, currently Rodrigo de Rato y Figaredo. That arrangement is, as I recall, the reason the World Bank Board of Directors let Wolfowitz in. (
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4358617.stm">BBC story )
Actually, the IMF isn't too pleased with the US, and for reasons that I think most folks here would agree with. This isn't to say that the IMF hasn't a
lot to answer for, but as far as current US fiscal policy goes, I think they have it right.
Anyways, here's what IMF Managing Director Rodrigo Rato, in a speech in April 2005, had to say:
“Finally, the continuing build-up of the large U.S. current account deficit—with counterpart surpluses mainly in Japan, emerging Asia and, increasingly, Middle-East oil-producing states and the CIS—is a mounting concern. To date, the U.S. deficit has continued to be financed relatively easily, aided by substantial flows from the Asian official sector, and the adjustment in the U.S. dollar has been orderly. However, the demand for U.S. assets is not unlimited. A sharp reduction, or a reversal, of capital inflows could entail serious consequences for currency and capital markets. The recent episodes of market reaction to the possibility of a diversification in central banks' international reserves remind us of the potential risks.”