BRUSSELS, June 29 (Xinhua) -- The European Union said
on Friday that it will install a new managing director for the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), excluding the possibility for a non-European to succeed
outgoing Spaniard Rato.
"We hope that the EU will identify a suitable
successor candidate in due time so as to ensure the important reform process
that has been started at the IMF will be taken to a good port and at a good
time," said Amelia Torres, spokeswoman for European Economic and Monetary
Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia.
The IMF current managing director Rato announced
Thursday he would step down in October for personal reasons, ending his
five-year term two years earlier.
"My family circumstances and responsibilities,
particularly with regard to the education of my children, are the reason for
relinquishing earlier than expected my responsibilities at the Fund," he said.
Rato's surprise resignation gave the IMF four months
to search for a new leader.
As a usual practice, a European should lead the Fund,
while an American takes charge of the World Bank, since the United States and
Europe are the two biggest contributors to both financial institutions.
But the two sister bodies were under pressure to give
more say to other members and developing countries, including the choice of
their respective leaders.
International development groups and NGOs were
calling European countries to scrap the outdated rules and give up their
privileges.
"European countries are now being given a second
chance to lead the reform of international financial institutions," said Peter
Chowla, policy and advocacy officer at the Bretton Woods Project, "they just
missed a historic opportunity with the resignation of Paul Wolfowitz at the
World Bank."
Despite heated debate over the successor to
Wolfowitz, who was forced to step down for his promotion of his girlfriend, the
World Bank earlier this week unanimously approved former U.S. deputy secretary
of state Robert Zoellick as its president.
European countries "can atone by ensuring that the
next IMF managing director is selected through an open, transparent and
inclusive process, where selection is based on merit not nationality, and where
the views of all members have equal weight," Chowla said.