WASHINGTON, US
Bulgarian economist, Kristalina Georgieva has been reappointed to the position of Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a second five-year term, which begins on October 1.
The decision by the IMF’s Executive Board, made on Friday, was
unanimous.
After various discussions,
including with Kristalina Georgieva herself, the sole candidate for her
succession as Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, the IMF’s
Executive Board decided on her reappointment.
Kristalina Georgieva has been
at the helm of the international financial institution for several years, an
organization of which Mozambique has been a member since September 24, 1984,
and has benefited from various types of financing.
“In making this decision, the
Board praised Ms. Georgieva’s strong and agile leadership during her tenure, in
which she faced a series of major global shocks. Georgieva led the IMF’s
unprecedented response to these shocks, including the approval of over $360
billion in new financing since the start of the pandemic for 97 countries,”
reads the IMF’s statement.
Under Kristalina Georgieva’s
leadership, the International Monetary Fund introduced new financing mechanisms
considered innovative, including the Resilience and Sustainability Mechanism
and the Food Shock Window.
According to the International
Monetary Fund, during Georgieva’s first term, the Poverty Reduction and Growth
Trust was also reactivated, with the capacity to mobilize concessional loans to
its poorest members.
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