India too will advocate the IMF quote reforms at the two-day meeting of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors beginning Saturday.
"We will actively lobby with the US (over the issue of IMF quota reforms). . . US Congress must understand that it is in the interest of the US to reform the IMF," Joe Hockey, Treasurer Australia, told reporters here on the sidelines of Institute of International Finance conference.
The IMF quota reforms, which seeks to increase the voting share of emerging economies including India, had hit a roadblock with the US Congress refusing to increase the American contribution to the multilateral body.
Besides the IMF quota reforms, the G20 ministerial, which will be attended by Indian Finance Minister P Chidambaram and RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan, will focus on implications of US Fed tapering of bond purchases on emerging economies and the steps being taken by the different nations to fight corruption and combat tax evasion.
India is likely to vigorously push for early completion of the IMF quota reforms at the ministerial meeting of the G20, a club of rich and developing nations.
The IMF reviews members' quotas once in five years and the last such review took place in December, 2010. India has already consented to its quota increase under the review though it would cost the exchequer Rs 14,000 crore (Rs 140 billion).
Once implemented, India's share will increase from the current 2.44 per cent to 2.75 per cent, following which the country will become the eighth largest quota holder at the IMF, up from the 11th
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