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Reuters
Reuters
Business
Francesco Guarascio

EU to choose between Dijsselbloem, Georgieva, for IMF; Rehn quits

FILE PHOTO: Jeroen Dijsselbloem in Brussels, Belgium, July 11, 2017. - RC17F66AB930/File Photo

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Union governments will try on Friday to choose a candidate to lead the International Monetary Fund from a field narrowed to just two, Dutchman Jeroen Dijsselbloem and Bulgaria's Kristalina Georgieva, after three candidates pulled out of the race.

Finland's central bank governor, Olli Rehn, and Spanish Economy Minister Nadia Calvino withdrew on Friday after a first round of voting among representatives of the EU's 28 nations. Mario Centeno, the Portuguese chairman of euro zone finance ministers, had pulled out on Thursday.

FILE PHOTO: Governor of the Bank of Finland, Olli Rehn attends a Reuters Newsmaker event in London, Britain, May 29, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

As chairman of euro zone finance ministers, Dijsselbloem steered the euro zone out of the debt crisis, orchestrating with the IMF the bailout of Greece, Cyprus and Spanish banks. But he is opposed by high-debt EU countries for the austerity measures attached to the rescues.

Georgieva, 65, is chief executive at the World Bank after a long career at the lender, the IMF's twin organisation. Her candidacy would force a change in IMF rules that require the managing director to be less than 65 years old.

Britain opposed the plan to select a candidate now, saying it was "premature" and did not allow London enough time to propose one of its own, according to a confidential note seen by Reuters.

FILE PHOTO: Kristalina Georgieva of Bulgaria at the EU Parliament in Brussels October 2, 2014. REUTERS/Eric Vidal/File Photo -/File Photo

Candidates for the head of the Washington-based IMF can be fielded until Sept. 6. French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire is leading the process to select a European candidate.

The top job at the world lender has historically been filled by a European, but candidates from elsewhere may gain traction if Europe splits.

The former IMF chief, France's Christine Lagarde, resigned in July after EU leaders chose her to replace Mario Draghi as European Central Bank president.

FILE PHOTO: Spain's Minister of Economy Nadia Calvino delivers a speech during a news conference on the second day of the informal meeting of European Union Finance ministers in Bucharest, Romania, April 6, 2019. Inquam Photos/George Calin via REUTERS

DIVISIONS

Northern European countries prefer Dijsselbloem; southern and eastern states are seen pushing for Georgieva, one European official said.

Since an informal compromise was impossible, France decided to push for a vote. A candidate who obtains 55% of the votes of the 28 EU states, representing at least 65% of its population, will win.

The IMF chief should have a proven understanding of how the fund works, a commitment to multilateral organisations and be an effective communicator, the IMF board said.

A new round of voting was underway after the first ballot failed to produce the required majority.

"It is a mathematical possibility that no-one will make it today," one official involved in the process said. "But I think at the end of the day after a lot of arm-twisting they will come up with one."

Centeno said on Thursday he was pulling out of the race "in this stage of the process", adding he would be available if needed for a compromise solution.

Britain did not field a candidate because it could not come up with a name on time, London said in a note sent to France. A new British government led by Boris Johnson was formed only last week.

(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio @fraguarascio; additional reporting by Yann Le Guernigou in Paris and Giuseppe Fonte in Rome; editing by John Chalmers, Janet Lawrence, Larry King)

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