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3/19/2020

Statement of Secretary Mnuchin for the International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC) Meeting | U.S. Department of the Treasury

Statement of Secretary Mnuchin for the International Monetary
and Financial Committee (IMFC) Meeting
July 5, 2017

IMFC Statement
April 2017
I look forward to participating in this spring's IMFC meetings, which provide us an opportunity
to assess global economic prospects and to discuss the important role of the IMF in promoting
strong, sustainable, balanced, and inclusive economic growth.
The U.S. economy continues to expand at a steady pace, and forecasts suggest stronger growth
this year and next. Consumer confidence has risen noticeably in recent months and remains
near multi-year highs, while labor market conditions continue to improve. Rising home prices,
equity gains, and deleveraging progress have contributed to improved household balance
sheets. While increasing, headline inflation remains relatively low, and core inflation is stable.
Nevertheless, the U.S. economy continues to face challenges, with growth last year languishing
below pre-crisis levels amid weak business investment. The economy has gone through periods
of disappointing performance before, however, and a continuation of this weak growth is not
pre-ordained. In response, the Administration is undertaking an ambitious policy agenda that
includes tax reform, deregulation, and infrastructure investment to sustainably raise U.S.
economic output and employment. In tandem with our domestic reforms we will continue to
promote an expansion of trade with those partners committed to market-based competition,
while more rigorously defending ourselves against unfair trade practices.
Outside the United States, while the IMF and private analysts expect global growth to expand
this year and next, there are questions about how sustainable and broad-based this growth will
be. Medium-term growth prospects remain muted due in part to the decline in total factor
productivity, continued weak domestic demand, and banking-sector problems in some
countries.
Significantly, the global economy continues to exhibit large and persistent external imbalances,
which contribute to the sentiment that the existing international monetary and trading system
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Statement of Secretary Mnuchin for the International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC) Meeting | U.S. Department of the Treasury

does not benefit all. In this environment, the United States calls upon the IMF to more robustly
fulfill its surveillance mandate in pursuit of strong, sustainable, balanced, and inclusive global
growth. This should include strong analysis of member exchange rates and external imbalances
in both the External Sector Report and in Article IV surveillance. The IMF should also identify
specific policy adjustments at the country level to achieve substantially improved balance in the
overall system. We look to the IMF to highlight where surplus countries can more forcefully
contribute to support symmetric adjustment in pursuit of a fairer global system.
Countries with large external surpluses and sound public finances have a particular
responsibility for contributing to a more robust global economy by deploying fiscal policy
aggressively to boost growth and help facilitate global rebalancing. In our view, excessively
large trade surpluses, like excessively large trade deficits, are not conducive to supporting a free
and fair trading system. Fair and transparent currency practices are also a critical part of
ensuring that the benefits of trade are shared equitably. Countries should abide by their
exchange rate commitments, including commitments to refrain from competitive devaluation,
to not use monetary policies to target exchanges rates for competitive purposes, and to consult
closely on exchange rates.
For many decades, the IMF has played a key role in anchoring the international monetary
system and in promoting international cooperation to achieve strong, sustainable, balanced,
and inclusive growth. We welcome the IMF's role in providing expert guidance and financial
assistance in countries as diverse as Ukraine and Egypt. We encourage the IMF to remain
steadfast in encouraging the di icult but necessary structural reforms that are critical to
sustained and inclusive growth in these countries. We also recognize the IMF's crucial role in
helping low income countries achieve macroeconomic stability. In countries like Guinea,
Liberia, and Côte d'Ivoire the IMF has been responsive and flexible in rapidly changing
circumstances, including the Ebola crisis and severe commodity price shocks.
Targeting and dismantling the financial networks of terrorist organizations is a top U.S. priority,
and improving anti-money laundering and counter terrorist financing (AML/CFT) systems is
critical to this goal. We welcome the IMF's important work providing technical assistance to
member countries to strengthen their regulatory and supervisory frameworks with respect to
anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism. It is also imperative that the
IMF be a leader in fighting corruption.
We also support the IMF's work on the low-income debt sustainability framework, given rising
debt burdens across a number of low-income countries. The IMF should remain vigilant in
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Statement of Secretary Mnuchin for the International Monetary and Financial Committee (IMFC) Meeting | U.S. Department of the Treasury

monitoring debt levels, assist countries in strengthening debt management capacity, and work
harder to avoid another lend-and-forgive cycle, which would damage IMF credibility and
jeopardize economic gains in low income countries.
We look forward to continuing international cooperation via the IMF to secure sustainable
growth and a more robust and fair global economy.

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