Christine Lagarde appointed as IMF chief

Washington, February 20 (PTI): Christine Lagarde, who steered the IMF through some troubled times including the Eupropean financial crisis, has been re-appointed as its Managing Director for a second five-year term after an uncontested election.   The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Friday selected 60-year-old Lagarde to serve as IMF Managing Director for a second five-year term starting on July 5, 2016, IMF said in a statement. The Board’s decision was taken by consensus.   France’s former finance minister secured early backing from many of the fund’s most powerful members when the IMF’s executive board launched the selection process in January, keeping other contenders from making an alternate bid and ensuring her a second term.

  Ms. Lagarde took the IMF’s top spot in mid-2011 after its former managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn was arrested in New York under rape allegations, charges that were later dropped. Lagarde tamed the fund’s internal turmoil and then helped temper Europe’s raging debt crisis by pressing Europe into recapitalising its rotting banking sector.   Before her appointment at the IMF in 2011, Ms. Lagarde had an extensive and noteworthy career as an anti-trust and labour lawyer.   She served as partner with the international law firm of Baker & McKenzie where she became Chairman of the Global Executive Committee in 1999, and subsequently Chairman of the Global Strategic Committee in 2004.   She held the top post at the firm until June 2005 when she was named to her initial ministerial post in France.   Lagarde has degrees from the Institute of Political Studies (IEP) and from the Law School of Paris X University, where she also lectured prior to joining Baker & McKenzie in 1981.   When appointed in 2011, Lagarde became the first woman named to the top IMF post since the institution’s inception in 1944.



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