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International Financial Crises: Challenges Remain in IMF's Ability to Anticipate, Prevent, and Resolve Financial Crises

GAO-03-734 Published: Jun 16, 2003. Publicly Released: Jun 16, 2003.
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Highlights

Building on reform initiatives instituted after the Mexican financial crisis, the IMF implemented new initiatives in the mid-1990s to better anticipate, prevent, and resolve sovereign financial crises. GAO was asked to assess (1) the IMF's framework for anticipating financial crises, (2) the status of key IMF reform initiatives to prevent financial crises, and (3) new IMF proposals to resolve future financial crises.

Recommendations

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status
Department of the Treasury To help strengthen the Fund's crisis prevention initiatives the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to improve the timeliness of publication of Financial System Stability Assessments and Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes.
Closed – Implemented
In June 2003 (GAO-03-734, International Financial Crises: Challenges Remain in IMF's Ability to Anticipate, Prevent, and Resolve Financial Crises, June 16, 2003), GAO recommended that to help strengthen the International Monetary Fund's (the Fund's) crisis prevention initiatives the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to improve the timeliness of publication of Financial System Stability Assessments (FSSA) and Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes (ROSC). Treasury agreed with our recommendation. On July 1, 2005, the Fund published a staff report that assessed the...
Department of the Treasury To help strengthen the Fund's crisis prevention initiatives the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to expand the coverage, frequency, and publication of reports on member countries' progress on implementing assessment recommendations.
Closed – Implemented
In its June 16, 2003 report entitled International Financial Crises: Challenges Remain in IMF's Ability to Anticipate, Prevent, and Resolve Financial Crises (GAO-03-734), GAO recommended the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund (USED) to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to expand the coverage, frequency, and publication of reports on member countries' progress on implementing assessment recommendations to help strengthen the Fund's crisis prevention initiatives. According to a Treasury official both Treasury and the USED have agreed with GAO's recommendation from the outset and that pursuing this recommendation has...
Department of the Treasury To help strengthen the Fund's crisis prevention initiatives the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to improve the assessment reports' readability, for example, by creating a standardized format in which to present executive summaries and key findings.
Closed – Implemented
In June 2003 (GAO-03-734, International Financial Crises: Challenges Remain in IMF's Ability to Anticipate, Prevent, and Resolve Financial Crises, June 16, 2003), GAO recommended that to help strengthen the International Monetary Fund's (the Fund's) crisis prevention initiatives, the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to improve the timeliness of publication of Financial System Stability Assessments (FSSA) and Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes (ROSC). Treasury agreed with our recommendation. On July 1, 2005, the Fund published a staff report that assessed the...
Department of the Treasury To help strengthen the Fund's crisis prevention initiatives the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to pursue strategies for increasing participation in the Financial Sector Assessment Program and all modules of the Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes, including the possibility of making participation mandatory for all members of the IMF.
Closed – Implemented
In June 2003 (GAO-03-734, International Financial Crises: Challenges Remain in IMF's Ability to Anticipate, Prevent, and Resolve Financial Crises, June 16, 2003), GAO recommended that to help strengthen the International Monetary Fund's (the Fund's) crisis prevention initiatives the Secretary of the Treasury should instruct the U.S. Executive Director of the Fund to work with other Executive Board members to encourage the Fund to improve the timeliness of publication of Financial System Stability Assessments (FSSA) and Reports on the Observance of Standards and Codes (ROSC). Treasury agreed with our recommendation. On July 1, 2005, the Fund published a staff report that assessed the...

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Topics

Financial managementInternational economic relationsRisk managementStrategic planningPrivate sectorUnderwriting standardsFinancial crisisBond marketCrisisInternational Monetary Fund