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AIX-EN-PROVENCE, France (Reuters) – European finance ministers need to find a compromise candidate to replace Christine Lagarde as the head of the International Monetary Fund, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Saturday.
FILE PHOTO: French Finance Minster Bruno Le Maire leaves a cabinet meeting at the Elysee Palace on April 17, 2019. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer/File Photo
European leaders nominated Lagarde last week to succeed Mario Draghi as president of the European Central Bank, raising the question of who would in turn replace her at the IMF.
Speaking on the sidelines of an economics and business conference in southern France, Le Maire that European finance ministers would discuss the issue at a meeting in Brussels on Tuesday.
“We need to find a compromise at the European level… I hope that we will find a compromise about the best candidate, the best European candidate for the IMF,” he told journalists.
“If we have a good European candidate we might have a good candidate for the IMF,” he added in response to a question about whether Bank of England governor Mark Carney, who holds British, Canadian and Irish passports, could be fielded as Europe’s candidate.
A French official said that Le Maire was due to discuss the issue with President Emmanuel Macron this weekend and that he was likely to speak with Carney beforehand.
France was aware that support was building for Carney, the official added, saying that if Paris decided to back him it would be sooner rather than later.
Traditionally the Washington-based IMF has been led by a European, while its sister institution the World Bank has been run by an American. At times, larger emerging market countries have sought to disrupt the duopoly with their own candidates.
Given that the World Bank presidency recently went to American David Malpass, the French official said there was no reason why the IMF should not go to European again.
Carney, who has also been governor of the Bank of Canada, is widely respected in international policy circles.
Le Maire ruled himself out for the IMF job on Friday, telling BFM TV in an interview that he intended to stay at the French finance ministry for the five years of President Emmanuel Macron’s mandate.
Reporting by Leigh Thomas, Editing by Sarah White
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