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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

IMF picks Lagarde in sign of change

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde answers reporters questions Tuesday after she was chosen to lead the International Monetary Fund. (Associated Press)
Christopher Rugaber And Sarah Dilorenzo Associated Press

WASHINGTON – During her interview for the top job at the International Monetary Fund last week, Christine Lagarde noticed a striking pattern.

All the questions came from men.

“There was not one single woman,” the French Finance Minister said Tuesday on French television.

Now there is.

On Tuesday, the IMF’s 24-member board decided she should become the first woman to lead the global lending organization, which is recovering from a sex scandal involving the man she’ll replace.

When she begins a five-year term next week, Lagarde will take charge of a melting pot of international elites – one that was known for male-dominated clubbiness well before the scandal involving Dominique Strauss-Kahn, her predecessor.

In her remarks to French television, she spoke to the cultural shift her selection represents.

“While I was being questioned for three hours by 24 men, I thought, ‘It’s good that things are changing a little,’ ” she said.

Not everything will change. Lagarde will become the 11th European to lead the IMF, extending a streak that began with the organization’s creation in 1945. Among the challenges that await her, she must prod fellow Europeans to take painful steps to prevent a default by Greece.

Should Lagarde, 55, succeed in changing the IMF’s culture, it may have less to do with her gender than with her experience in corporate America.

Before she entered politics in 2005, Lagarde led the Chicago-based international law firm Baker & McKenzie for five years. American management tends to be less tolerant of sexual scandals and more likely to educate its staff on reporting harassment.

Her selection became all but assured once the Obama administration endorsed her earlier Tuesday. She had also won support from Europe, China and Russia.