To get inside Christine Lagarde’s head, read up on Japanese proverbs, Georgian poets and Mozart’s Magic Flute
- In many of her speeches, Lagarde’s hope for Europe’s success is hard to miss
In eight years as managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Christine Lagarde made close to 200 speeches in dozens of countries.
The first woman to run the world’s financial firehouse has urged some central banks to provide monetary stimulus and cautioned others to lean against asset bubbles. She exudes the European ideal of “shared prosperity” but carefully tailors her messages to her audiences.
As European Central Bank (ECB) watchers try to divine how she might communicate as the next ECB president, one thing to understand is she’s a student of the arts, history, philosophy, literature and even nature.
Great minds of the past, according to Lagarde, can guide policymakers in the present.
Speaking in Geneva on June 14, she quoted Franklin D. Roosevelt in a speech about the IMF’s approach to social spending: “The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little.”