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IMF Removes Age Limit For Managing Director’s Position

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has approved the removal of the age limit for the position of IMF managing director, paving the way for Kristalina Georgieva to head the multilateral lender.
Since 1951, the IMF’s bylaws had prohibited the appointment of a candidate aged 65 or over as managing director.
It had also prohibited the managing director from serving past his/her 70th birthday, the IMF executive board said in a statement at the weekend.
The Board of Governors has approved the proposal by the executive board to remove the age limit for the position of IMF managing director, it said.
The Board said the amendment, effective immediately, brings the managing director’s terms of appointment into line with those of members of the IMF executive board, which the managing director chairs, and those of the president of the World Bank, who are not subject to an age limit.
The 66-year-old Georgieva, a Bulgarian national, served on the European Commission and has been the Chief Executive Officer of the World Bank since January 2017.
So far, Georgieva the only candidate, was selected by the European Union to lead the IMF after narrowly defeating former Dutch Finance Minister, Jeroen Dijsselbloem.

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