Drug dealers and crime in Victoria
May 30, 2004National Accounts March Quarter 2004, economic growth, drug barons, police corruption, ministerial advice, Labor tax policy – Press conference, Canberra
June 2, 2004NO.044
NOMINATION OF AUSTRALIAN ALTERNATE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR TO THE IMF
The Australian Government has decided to nominate Mr Richard Murray, a senior
official with the Commonwealth Treasury, for appointment as an Alternate Executive
Director at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) from March 2005 to October
2006.
On the acceptance of his nomination, Mr Murray will assist the Executive Director
in representing a constituency of countries within the IMF comprising Australia,
Kiribati, Korea, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Mongolia,
New Zealand, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Samoa, Seychelles, Solomon
Islands and Vanuatu. Alternate Executive Directors are employees of the IMF
and their salaries and other allowances are met by the Fund.
The Australian Government intends that Mr Murray would be nominated by Australia
to fill the position of Executive Director for a two year period when it becomes
vacant in November 2006.
Australia has been a member of the IMF since 1947. The IMF is an organisation
of 184 member countries, established to promote international monetary cooperation
and exchange stability, to foster economic and employment growth; and to provide
temporary financial assistance to countries under adequate safeguards to help
ease balance of payments adjustment. Following the financial crises of 1997
98 a key task of the IMF has been to strengthen the stability of the international
financial system and to review its future role and operations.
Mr Murray is a highly experienced Treasury officer who has held various senior
executive positions in the Treasury covering macroeconomic forecasting, infrastructure
and competition policy, banking and finance, taxation policy, international
economy, foreign investment, budget policy and debt management. Mr Murray was
also the Treasury representative at the Australian High Commission, London (1993
96), Executive Member of the Foreign Investment Review Board (1998), and head
of the Treasury’s Domestic Economy Division (1998-2000). In 2000, Mr Murray
moved to the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet as head of its Economic
Division. He returned to the Treasury as Chief Adviser (Strategy) in 2001 and
was promoted to his current position as head of the new Fiscal Group in July
2002.
CANBERRA
31 May 2004
Contact: Amanda Kennedy
02 6277 7340