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27/12/2016 | Rethinking Globalization - Lagarde’s Failure to Do the Honorable Thing – And Resign

Jean-Pierre Lehmann

Christine Lagarde’s confirmation as IMF Managing Director further undermines global governance.

 

here is no question that Christine Lagarde carries out her assignments with a certain aplomb and effectiveness. She is also extremely bright and has considerable charm and style. Her personal integrity is irreproachable.

This affair is about much more than “negligence”

And yet, the IMF Executive Board’s recent decision to let her stay in office was a mistake. Lagarde was convicted on December 19 by a French court for negligence in her conduct as France’s Finance Minister in 2008.

That in itself is not such a big deal. We all make mistakes. The irresponsible transfer of over €400 million in 2008 to Bernard Tapie, a shady figure in French sports and business, occurred under her watch when she served in the government of Nicolas Sarkozy.

A real double standard at work

The reason why letting her stay on as head of the IMF is a big mistake. The argument offered up in her “defense” — that she was a novice in the murky world of politics and that she was only convicted of negligence – should not apply when you are head of the IMF.

Anyone who serves as the Managing Director of the IMF – one of the most visible and most important positions in global governance – must be beyond reproach. One cannot afford to be “negligent.”

Under those truly murky circumstances, the correct thing for Madame Lagarde to do would have been for her to admit the mistake and resign. There are many other ways in which she can deploy her skills to serve humanity.

Lagarde’s actions must be seen in a broader context, not just the fine points of (Western) courtrooms. There is a massive backlash against globalization.

And there is a justified sense of outrage in the public-at-large that political elites in Western countries are all too eager to serve their business masters (and enriching the latter even more, whether consciously, subconsciously or unconsciously).

The IMF as a symbol

The IMF stands out not only as one of the most critical and influential institutions of globalization, but indeed as its symbol.

Along with other major institutions of global governance, notably the World Bank, the WTO and the UN as well, global governance, the IMF has fallen into disrepute.

Lagarde’s personal likability should not – and cannot – be a factor in that regard.

Even good people have to fall on their sword

Unlike several other leaders of these institutions – like the World Bank’s inept Jim Kim and the weak Ban-Ki-Moon — Christine Lagarde stood out for her qualities rather than defects. She was a good leader.

But she did make a mistake that is heavy with consequences. Maintaining someone in the post of head of the IMF who is accused of negligence over the fraudulent transfer of €400 million not just further undermines the cause of global economic governance. It sets a terrible example.

Keeping Lagarde at the IMF must bring joy to African kleptocrats who can argue, within reason, that the IMF has no standing to rail against them for what they will call, in their self-defense, having committed similar acts of “negligence.”

Retaining Lagarde in her post as IMF chief fuels further the anti-globalization (and anti-establishment) backlash. It strengthens the perception that “justice” being meted out to the elite that is far more tolerant and favorable than it is for ordinary folk.

The right thing to do

The right thing to do would have been to maintain her innocence, underline her handicap as a political novice, to accept that there was an error of negligence, and on those grounds to stand down from her position as head of the IMF.

There are many, many ways in which she can still deploy her skills to improving the condition of humanity,Had Chrsitine Lagarde done the right thing, she would have set a powerful example in favor of accountability even in circumstances where there was no suggestion of receiving any personal advantages.

The consequences

By failing to do the right thing, this otherwise admirable woman has achieved the very opposite of what she set out to do on two critical accounts:

  1. Christine Lagarde has undermined, not strengthened, global governance.
  2. And she has confirmed the perception that the elites benefit from unfair advantages that effectively render them irresponsible
**Jean-Pierre Lehmann is an emeritus professor of international political economy at IMD in Lausanne, Switzerland. He is currently a visiting professor on the Faculty of Business and Economics at Hong Kong University.

Previous academic appointments include Sophia University (Tokyo), Oxford, Stirling University (UK), Tohoku University (Japan) INSEAD (France), School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University (Bologna Campus), London Business School, and the Stockholm School of Economics.

In 1995, Mr. Lehmann founded the Evian Group, an international coalition of corporate, government and opinion leaders united by a common vision of enhancing global prosperity for the benefit of all by fostering an open, inclusive, sustainable and equitable global market economy in a rules-based multilateral framework.

His doctoral thesis was on Japanese history and technology transfer during the period of transformation in the mid/late 19th century. He has spent most of his professional life working in and on East and South Asia. In the course of the last decade, he has also become actively involved in projects in Africa, the Middle East and Latin America.

He acts in various leading capacities in a number of global public policy institutions, as an adviser to governments and corporations, on the editorial board of various journals and as a frequent commentator in the international media.

He is the author of several books and numerous articles. His latest book, co-edited with his son Fabrice Lehmann, is Peace and Prosperity through World Trade: Achieving the 2019 Vision (Cambridge, 2010). He also writes a monthly column for China Entrepreneurs Magazine.

Jean-Pierre Lehmann earned a B.S. degree at the School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, and his D.Phil. at Oxford University.

20 minutos (España)

 



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