By Antoni
Slodkowski and Julien Toyer
(Reuters) -
Germany held firm on Friday
in insisting it was too soon to say Greece deserved more time to meet
its budget-cutting goals even as the head of the IMF laid out the case for
leniency.
IMF Managing
Director Christine Lagarde, sitting next to Germany 's
finance minister, said Athens
needed more breathing space. "Given the... lack of growth, given the
market pressure, given the efforts that have been undertaken, a bit more time
is necessary," she said, amplifying on remarks made on Thursday.
In a
softening of earlier advice, the IMF has argued that forcing Greece and other debt-burdened countries in Europe to reduce their deficits too quickly is
counter-productive because it hurts the economy.
The shift
was welcomed by some emerging market countries as well as long-time critics who
say that the tough conditions attached to IMF loans inflict undue economic pain
and make it harder for countries to grow their way out of debt.
"We
have been arguing for some time that single-minded and draconian fiscal
policies may be counterproductive and have a tendency to backfire," said
Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega.
But Germany , Europe 's
largest creditor country and the key to any lasting fiscal reforms, pushed back
and said reversing course on promised deficit reductions would weaken
credibility.
Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Europe had made plenty of crisis-fighting
progress, echoing comments from other European officials who said there should
be greater attention paid to U.S.
fiscal troubles.
He
criticized Lagarde for calling for flexibility even before the
"troika" of Athens 's lenders -- the
IMF, the European Union and the European Central Bank -- wrap up a review of
their 130 billion euro bailout program for Greece .
"Until
we have the troika report, we must not speculate," he said.
Lagarde and
Schaeuble shared the stage as part of a panel discussion, their first public
joint appearance since the IMF head surprised investors on Thursday by stating
unequivocally that Greece
and Spain
needed more time.
CHANGE OF
TUNE
The IMF's
change of tune on the speed of budget cuts stems from research it released this
week showing that aggressive fiscal consolidation crimps growth more sharply
than previously thought.
It also
reflects a desire by Lagarde, a former French finance minister, to demonstrate
the IMF is willing to get tough with Europe .
Big emerging economies, who have helped top up the IMF's crisis-fighting
coffers, had worried about the Fund's independence.
"Let
us not delude ourselves: without growth, the future of the global economy is in
jeopardy," she said.
"One
lesson is clear from history: reducing public debt is incredibly difficult
without growth. High debt, in turn, makes it harder to get growth," she
said.
Nobel
prize-winning economist Paul Krugman called the IMF's new research, contained
in its latest World Economic Outlook, "an extensively documented exercise
in hand-wringing."
"Kudos
to the Fund for having the courage to say this, which means bucking some
powerful players as well as admitting that its own analysis was flawed,"
Krugman wrote on his blog.
FASTER
REFORMS
While the
IMF has advocated a slower approach to debt reduction, it urged swifter policy
action, both in Europe and the United
States , to remove economic uncertainty and
help lift anemic global economic growth.
The IMF
meetings officially started on a regal note, with Japan 's crown prince in attendance.
Lagarde followed with some blunt warnings for the Fund's 188 member countries
that they were losing momentum in reforming the global financial system, a
running message from the IMF in the buildup to the meeting.
She said it
was not much safer than in 2008, when the collapse of Lehman Brothers triggered
a global meltdown.
In Europe , the IMF wants to see more progress toward
promised reforms that would create a tighter fiscal and banking union.
In the United States ,
the IMF has sounded the alarm over the "fiscal cliff" of automatic
spending cuts and tax increases that take effect early next year unless
Congress acts. Without action, the tightening could plunge the economy back into
recession, the IMF said.
"We
need to move beyond the system that gave us the crisis - a financial sector
where some, as the ancient Greeks might say, toyed with hubris and unleashed
nemesis," she said.
The Fund
lowered its global growth forecast this week for the second time since April.
Host Japan offered another reminder on Friday that its own economy was losing
steam as the government downgraded its forecast for a third straight month.
But many
officials pointed out that the global economy is still growing, and expressed
confidence that Europe would find a way out of
its mess.
"In Europe , the decision-making process is slow and
cumbersome. But it's always delivered in the end," said Portuguese Finance
Minister Vitor Gaspar.
(Reporting
by Reuters IMF team; Writing by Emily Kaiser; Editing by Tim Ahmann and Neil
Fullick)
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