| 
        THE WHITE HOUSE
        
        Office of the Press Secretary(Cologne, Germany)
 
         
 
         
          | For Immediate Release | June 18, 1999 |  
	
        
         FACT SHEET
        
        
	
        
         Strengthening the International Financial Architecture
        
        
       Last October, in the wake of severe financial crises in Asia and Russia that sent 
       shockwaves around the world, G-7 leaders committed to work to prevent financial 
       crises and better respond to them when they occur. Leaders have now agreed on new 
       steps to strengthen the international financial architecture:
       
       
        Stronger  International Institutions and a Greater Voice for Emerging Markets
       
       
       The IMF now has more powerful tools to prevent and respond to systemic crises - 
       large-scale, fast disbursing financing and the new line of credit (CCL) to protect 
       countries with sound policies from financial contagion.  These create strong 
       incentives to implement good policies.
       
       Finance ministers will establish an ongoing dialogue among systemically important 
       countries.  This dialogue will include emerging countries to reflect the fact that 
       tremors in their financial markets now reverberate in major markets around the 
       world.
       
       Because capital flows are global but financial regulation still rests with 
       individual countries, we created the new Financial Stability Forum to bring 
       together international regulators and G-7 authorities and to anticipate steps that 
       will be needed to tackle new risks.  We will expand membership in the Forum to 
       include more key financial centers.
       
       We agree to strengthen the IMF and the World Bank.
       
        
         
          | Already, countries are asking the IMF how they should strengthen their 
            policies to qualify for the new CCL -- even countries that do not face 
            immediate danger.  The incentives are working. |  
       
        Enhancing transparency
       
       
       Strong comprehensive standards for disclosure by governments and financial 
       institutions will help reinforce market discipline.
       
       Never before were details of IMF economic programs and policy-making discussions 
       available to the public.  Now, much of this will be public, along with much more 
       data on countries.
       
        
         
          | During the Asian crisis, investors often fled after learning that countries 
            had compromised their reserves through forward sales or by lending them to 
            domestic banks.  New disclosure rules will reveal such actions quickly, 
            discouraging such steps in the first place. |  
       
        Stronger Regulation in Lending Countries
       
       
       A stronger Basel Capital Accord to make capital charges better reflect the real 
       risk of lending, together with more focus on risk management, will encourage banks 
       to lend more prudently.
       
       New measures -- including greater transparency and sounder practices by lenders -- 
       will address problems raised by hedge funds and other highly-leveraged institutions.
       
        
         
          | Before the crisis, international banks making short-term loans to Indonesian 
            banks had to set aside the same amount of capital as they did for loans to 
            Citibank.  Suggested revisions to the Basle Capital Accord would require them 
            to retain from two and a half times to five times as much - discouraging risky 
            debt accumulation. |  
       
        Equipping  Emerging Market Economies to deal Better with Risk
       
       
       Weak financial sectors and heavy reliance by firms and governments on short term 
       borrowing proved a dangerous combination.  Global standards and guidelines for 
       stronger policies and stronger regulation -- in areas ranging from debt management 
       to corporate governance to insolvency regimes -- will encourage better policies.
       
       New policies will promote more sustainable exchange rate regimes.
       
       Capital flows offer tremendous benefits, but they also bring risks.  The new 
       consensus on liberalizing capital flows emphasizes the importance of strengthening 
       financial systems and prudential safeguards.
       
        
         
          | Removing incentives to seek short-term capital, encouraging countries to fund 
            themselves at longer terms, and introducing prudential safeguards on bank 
            borrowing will discourage the buildups of short-term debt that proved so 
            critical for countries like Thailand, Indonesia, Korea, and Brazil. |  
       
        Sharing Responsibility for Crisis Resolution
       
       
       A new framework sets out the range of approaches the official sector will take in 
       facing crises - the principles that will guide decisions and the tools that will be 
       used.  This promotes appropriate "bailing-in" of private sector lenders and should 
       help prevent contagion.
       
       New measures -- including provisions for better debt management -- will help 
       insulate countries from market shocks and help prevent shocks from becoming full 
       blown crises.
       
        
         
          | The new framework should reduce the risk that investors will lend in the 
            expectation that the international official community will protect them from 
            adverse outcomes.  Investors should make better decisions if they understand 
            the framework for official action. |  |