7.5.08

sell 400 tons of gold reserves




The Board of Governors of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday approved the sale of 403.3 tons of gold reserves as part of a financial overhaul that will allow the Fund to generate revenues from a variety of sources.

Governors from 176 of the Fund's 185 member countries cast their votes, according to a statement issued by the international financial institution.

Of these, all voted in favor of the resolution. Approval of the resolution required a majority of the votes cast.

"With this decisive endorsement, the Fund's members have once again demonstrated their support for reforming key components of the institution's framework, including its financial structure," said IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn in the statement.

The sale, amounting to some 12 percent of the IMF's gold reserves, could yield around 11 billion dollars.

This would help finance a reorganization of the institution as it seeks to survive a downturn in lending to troubled countries, its main income source, IMF officials said last month.

If approved, gold sales would likely be conducted over several years to avoid any risk of market disruption, according to an IMF statement last month.

As more and more developing countries began rejecting financial aid, the IMF is trying to find new ways that can provide steady sources of income to it.

The institution faces a budget shortfall of some 140 million dollars for the fiscal year 2008 that ends on April 30, according to news reports.
Editor: Sun Yunlong

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