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2011

Training
Catalog

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND


700 19th Street, NW
WASHINGTON, DC 20431
U.S.A.

FAX: +1 (202) 623-6490


E-MAIL: INSINFO@IMF.ORG
WEB: WWW.IMF.ORG/INSTITUTE
Contents

Foreword by the Managing Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2


Director’s Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Introduction and User Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Headquarters Training and Regional Training Centers and Training Schedules . . . . . . . . . . . 8
IMF Headquarters (HQ) in Washington, D.C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Distance Learning (DL) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America in Brazil (BTC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Other Training (OT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

Course Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML-CFT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Balance of Payments Statistics (BPS)(Six-week BPS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Balance of Payments Statistics (BPS)(Two-week BPS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Central Banking and Financial Sector Legislation (FTL) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Design, Sequencing, and Implementation of Financial Management Reform (PFMR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Economic Policies for Financial Stability (EFS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
External Debt Statistics (EDS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
External Vulnerabilities (EXV) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Finance for Macroeconomists (FME) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Financial Market Analysis (FMA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Financial Markets and New Financial Instruments (FMN) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Financial Programming and Policies (FPP)(Five-week FPP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Financial Programming and Policies (FPP)(Two-week FPP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Financial Programming and Policies-Inflation Targeting (FPP-IT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Financial Programming and Policies through Distance Learning (FPP-DL) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Financial Soundness Indicators (FSI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Financial Stability, Systemic Risk and Macro-Prudential Policy (FSMP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Government Finance Statistics (GFS)(Four-week GFS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Government Finance Statistics (GFS)(Two-week GFS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
International Trade-In-Services Statistics (ITS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Legal Aspects of International Financial Institutions (LAIF) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Macroeconomic Diagnostics (MDS)(Four-week MDS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Macroeconomic Diagnostics (MDS)(Two-week MDS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Macroeconomic Forecasting (MF) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Macroeconomic Implications of Fiscal Issues (MIF) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Macroeconomic Management and Debt Issues (MDI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues (MMF) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy (MFP)(Four-week MFP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy (MFP)(Two-week MFP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Macroeconomic Management in Natural Resource-Rich Countries (MMNR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Macroeconomic Management for Senior Officials (MMSO) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Macro-Financial Surveillance (MS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy (MERP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Monetary and Financial Statistics (MFS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Monetary Policy Analysis (MPA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Mortgage Markets, Securitization, and Structured Finance (MSF) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
National Accounts Statistics (NAS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Price Statistics (PRS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop (PDS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop for G20+ Countries (PDS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop for Senior Officials (PDSO) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Real Property Taxation (RPT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Risk-Based Banking Supervision (BSO) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Safeguards Assessments of Central Banks (SAC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Sovereign Liability Management – Principles and Practices (SLM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
The Use of DSGE Models in the Policymaking Process (SEM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

Deadlines for Courses by Application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53


Administrative Arrangements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Application Process for HQ, DL, JVI, and STI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Application Requirements (HQ, DL, JVI, and STI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Selection Process (HQ, DL, JVI, and STI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Eligibility Criteria Relating to Previous Course Attendance (HQ, DL, JVI, and STI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Travel to Washington and Administrative Arrangements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Travel to Vienna and Administrative Arrangements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Travel to Singapore and Administrative Arrangements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Arrangements for BTC, CTP, ITP, and RTP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
The IMF Institute – Going Green! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Register to Stay in Touch – Agency Training Contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60

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Training Catalog 2011 page 1
Foreword by the Managing
Director
The last few years have been challenging for economic
policymakers, but the global community has avoided
Dominique Strauss-Kahn
narrow nationalist solutions and reaffirmed a commitment
to multilateralism. Aspects of the global crisis—in particular,
the rapidity and scope of spillovers from one country to
another—have focused the attention of policymakers on
the external implications of domestic developments and
policies. But rather than seeking to limit these international
interdependencies, there has been a widespread
commitment to the idea that solutions to global problems
require multilateral coordination.

page 2 |
A great deal of the work we do at the IMF thinking in monetary and exchange rate policies,
is aimed at improving the formulation and crisis prevention and management, the analysis
implementation of economic policies. Often, of debt sustainability, fiscal policy, and a slew of
and especially in the current circumstances, courses on finance and the relationship between
this means fostering an awareness of the global finance and macroeconomics.
ramifications of policy choices in individual
countries, and promoting policy options aimed Needless to say, delivering this extensive
at both national and global prosperity. We do training program is an expensive proposition.
this work through the ongoing policy dialogue Fund resources are generously supplemented
with our member countries in our surveillance by the financial support of numerous member
activities, through our financial support to countries and partner organizations—notably
countries implementing balance-of-payments Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, China, India,
adjustment programs, and through our training Japan, Portugal, Singapore, the United Kingdom,
and technical assistance activities. the African Development Bank, and the Arab
Monetary Fund. In addition, training increasingly
Training is an essential part of this endeavor: benefits from the network of regional technical
multilateralism thrives when all parties share assistance centers financed by donors. We are
an understanding of the analytical tools and extremely grateful for all the support we receive,
methodologies used in diagnosing problems and and are committed to maintaining the high
assessing policy options. Therefore, I see our quality standards in our training program which
economics training program, which has grown donors, as well as course participants, recognize
substantially in size and sophistication over the and appreciate.
years, as an essential part of the IMF’s broad
mandate. I invite all country officials from eligible countries
to consider the training opportunities offered in
The course program described in this catalog the 2011 program, and wish those who attend our
shows the global reach of our training activities. courses a most productive learning experience.
Training is conducted at IMF Headquarters in
Washington, D.C., through our network of seven
training programs around the world, and in other
overseas locations. Courses are delivered in, or
interpreted into, Arabic, Chinese, English, French,
Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish. The catalog
also shows the range of the curriculum: from
Dominique Strauss-Kahn
trademark fundamental courses—such as those
Managing Director
on the compilation and analysis of economic
International Monetary Fund
statistics (the first essential building block for
any economic analysis and policy formulation),
macroeconomic diagnostics, and the IMF’s
financial programming approach to the design
of adjustment policies—to courses on current

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Training Catalog 2011 page 3
Director’s Message
It is my pleasure to present the 2011 IMF Institute training
program. The courses outlined in this catalog represent a
significant collective investment in curriculum development.
Leslie Lipschitz
It is an investment with a carefully-specified and unique
objective—strengthening the capacity of government
officials to formulate and implement macroeconomic
policies based on the best available economic analysis
and institutional practice. This is an objective that is easy to
formulate but difficult to realize.

page 4 |
Like others in the business of teaching economics, macro-financial topics, and even old courses
we rely on current professional research; but, often use case studies where financial shocks
being at the IMF, our curriculum also reflects a or changes in market risk premiums are critical
gleaning of practical wisdom from the operational to the analysis. Participants in our courses want
work with our 187 member countries. In addition, to know more than just conceptual frameworks
an almost continuous dialogue with policy- or how to construct macroeconomic data; they
making agencies informs our assessment of want to understand how analysis can be brought
training needs and of the demand for different to bear on practical policymaking, and to learn
courses in the various regions we serve, about the experiences of countries confronted
and allows us to gauge how key economic with problems similar to those of their own
developments should influence the content of economies. These are aspects of the curriculum
these courses. that are seldom emphasized in standard university
teaching but are at the center of the IMF Institute
The current crisis—which began as a series of curriculum—case studies, hands-on exercises, and
shocks from private financial institutions in 2007, group discussions that are informed by a great
became a major financial crisis in 2008, and deal of actual experience.
subsequently metastasized into a broader set of
balance-of-payments or sovereign debt crises— Our training program is truly a team effort.
has brought new challenges to policymakers. The It involves not only the IMF Institute and
speed of contagion and the sheer complexity of other IMF departments, but also a number of
the problems have left many searching for new multilateral institutions and bilateral donors.
answers. The renewed economic instability has These partnerships have allowed us to expand
once again thrust the IMF into the center of the our course offerings to accommodate the large
storm, as a catalyst for macroeconomic policy demand for training, despite the considerable
coordination, as a forum for policy dialogue and resource pressures on many of the IMF
debate, and, of course, as provider of financial departments. Continued donor support is also
resources to countries experiencing balance of a sign of the value the international community
payment difficulties. While it is perhaps too soon sees in our program.
to cull policy wisdom from these developments
with confidence, it is clear even now that I look forward to welcoming country officials to
macroeconomic policymakers need to enhance our courses at IMF Headquarters in Washington,
their understanding in critical areas such as D.C. and at our regional training programs around
finance and financial stability, the interaction the world. As for many others in the past, I am
between finance and macroeconomics, and the sure that participating in IMF training will be a
techniques of macroeconomic diagnostics that useful and memorable experience.
direct attention to risks and vulnerabilities.

Our efforts in curriculum development in these


areas began several years ago, and have been
validated by the increasingly urgent attention Leslie Lipschitz
to macro-financial linkages since the onset of Director, IMF Institute
the crisis. More and more courses directly cover International Monetary Fund

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Training Catalog 2011 page 5
Introduction and User Guide
This catalog describes the training program that the IMF plans to
provide to member country officials during 2011 at its Headquarters
in Washington, D. C. and its regional training centers. It includes
overviews, training schedules, and course descriptions for each
of the IMF’s training centers, and information on administrative
arrangements for participants. In addition, the catalog provides
preliminary information on courses that the IMF Institute plans to
deliver at other training venues.

page 6 |
The IMF Institute is the lead training department of the USER GUIDE
International Monetary Fund (IMF). It organizes the pro-
gram described in this catalog and delivers much of the Headquarters Training and Regional
training itself. Together with the regional training centers, it Training Centers Overviews and Training
also administers the courses delivered at the IMF’s train- Schedules: This section focuses separately on each
ing centers by other IMF departments. As in years past, the of the Institute’s principal training locations: the IMF’s
2011 program offers training on a wide range of topics on Washington Headquarters and the regional training
which the IMF has expertise. The curriculum includes an centers. For each center it lists the countries that are
array of specialized courses by the Statistics, Fiscal Affairs, eligible to receive training, describes how to access the
Legal, Monetary and Capital Markets, and Finance Depart- center’s website and apply for courses (where relevant),
ments of the IMF, as well as those by the IMF Institute. and provides contact information. In addition, the
The program contains about 40 courses, many of which section provides a schedule of courses at each train-
are given multiple times and at different training centers. ing location. For each course, the schedules indicate
The comprehensive listing of the courses available at all the course number, the application deadline (where
training centers—Abu Dhabi, Austria, Brazil, China, India, relevant), the course start and end dates, the language
Singapore, Tunisia, and the IMF’s Washington Headquar- of instruction, and the IMF department that teaches the
ters—permits officials from countries eligible for training course. Some courses will have simultaneous inter-
at more than one location to more easily find all of the pretation in a second language, which is indicated in
courses available to them. parentheses on the course schedules. Fluency in the
language of instruction (or the language in which si-
The Institute training program continues to adapt exist- multaneous interpretation is provided) is a prerequisite
ing courses and develop new ones to stay attuned to the for all courses.
evolving needs of officials from the IMF’s member coun-
tries. The expansion of regional training centers has greatly Course Descriptions: This section provides stan-
facilitated this effort, both by providing venues for cost- dardized descriptions for all of the planned courses,
effective delivery of relatively short and specialized new arranged in alphabetical order by course title. A NEW
courses, and by providing scope to shift relatively short label marks those courses that are being offered for the
existing courses away from Washington to create more ca- first time in 2011, or that have undergone very substan-
pacity for longer courses at Headquarters. Because longer tial changes in their content.1 In addition to outlin-
courses draw on the expertise of many staff from the IMF ing course objectives, contents, and structure, each
Institute and other IMF departments, it is generally imprac- course description identifies the target audience for
tical to offer them at the regional training centers. the course, as well as any prerequisite qualifications
for those attending. Finally, it provides information on
In using this catalog, it should be noted that courses previ- training locations where courses are offered, course
ously offered under different names at different training start and end dates, and language of instruction.
centers have now been given a common title. Note also
that this catalog supplements, but does not replace, the Administrative Arrangements: This section
catalogs issued by the regional training centers. A con- provides information on application or nomination
certed effort will be made to deliver each of the courses procedures, the selection process, and arrangements
advertised in this catalog on the announced dates for the for course participants on such matters as travel, ac-
courses. However, unanticipated scheduling and staffing commodations, and health insurance.
difficulties inevitably arise, and a few of the courses may
need to be rescheduled or cancelled. Budgetary consider- 1 Courses that have been given new titles without substantial changes in
ations, including new funding for additional courses, may content are not listed as new courses.
also lead to modifications in the training program. Any
changes in the course schedules or country eligibility for
the different training centers will be posted promptly on
both the IMF Institute website (www.imf.org/institute)
and the websites of the affected regional training centers.

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Training Catalog 2011 page 7
Headquarters and Regional Training
Centers and Training Schedules
This section provides an overview of the IMF Institute’s training
programs at its Washington Headquarters and each of its regional
training centers (RTCs). For each location it indicates which countries
are eligible for IMF training, describes the process of selecting
course participants, and provides relevant information on websites,
application forms, and training center contacts, in addition to training
schedules. Course descriptions and schedules for each of the
courses at the different training centers are provided in subsequent
sections of the catalog. Information on distance learning (DL)
courses is included with the information on training at Headquarters.
This catalog does not provide information on IMF training that is not
delivered or coordinated by the IMF Institute or on training at the
RTCs by other organizations. Course schedules provide information
on date, language of instruction, application deadlines (where
applicable) and other details. Courses in schedule tables are listed
alphabetically.

page 8 |
HQ
IMF Headquarters (HQ) in Washington, D.C.

T
raining at IMF Headquarters (HQ) in Washington, Invitation: For courses by invitation, a link to the
D.C. is offered in four languages—Arabic, English, online nomination system will be provided in a
French, and Spanish. Much of the HQ curriculum is nomination request letter.
devoted to long courses that involve many IMF staff and
would be impractical to offer at the RTCs. These include Website: The current schedule and a full description of
the Institute’s five-week course on Financial Programming courses offered at Headquarters are available at www.
and Policies, the four-week courses on Macroeconomic imf.org/institute.
Diagnostics, Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal
Policy, Finance for Macroeconomists, and four- to six-week Contact Information:
courses delivered by the IMF’s Statistics Department. Contact: Mr. Ian Myers
Chief, Training Operations Division
Eligible countries: All IMF member countries Address: IMF Institute
excluding those few countries that have been declared International Monetary Fund
ineligible for technical assistance. 700 19th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20431
Selection Process: Courses are either by U.S.A.
application or invitation. Application procedures Telephone: + (202) 623-6660
are described in the section on Administrative Fax: + (202) 623-6490
Arrangements. For courses by invitation, candidates E-mail: insinfo@imf.org
are nominated by government agencies of targeted
countries upon the request of the responsible IMF
department.

Application: The online application form can be


accessed at www.imf.org/insapply for English and
Arabic1 courses, www.imf.org/ins/candidature for
Please note that beginning in August 2010,
French courses, and www.imf.org/ins/solicitud for the IMF Institute no longer accepts hardcopy
Spanish courses. applications.
1 Online applications for Arabic courses must be submitted in English.

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Training Catalog 2011 page 9
HQ
IMF Headquarters (HQ) in Washington, D.C.

Training Schedule

Course Application IMF


Course Name Number Deadline Begin Date End Date Language* Department
Balance of Payments Statistics HQ 11.06 12/3/2010 5/9/2011 6/17/2011 English STA

External Debt Statistics HQ 11.09 3/25/2011 8/29/2011 9/23/2011 English STA

Finance for Macroeconomists HQ 11.05 Invitation 5/2/2011 5/27/2011 English INS

Financial Programming and Policies HQ 11.01 8/20/2010 1/24/2011 2/25/2011 English INS

Financial Programming and Policies HQ 11.02 9/17/2010 2/21/2011 3/25/2011 French INS

Financial Programming and Policies HQ 11.07 12/31/2010 6/6/2011 7/8/2011 English INS

Financial Programming and Policies HQ 11.11 4/29/2011 10/3/2011 11/4/2011 Arabic INS

Financial Programming and Policies-Inflation HQ 11.12 5/13/2011 10/17/2011 11/18/2011 Spanish INS
Targeting
Government Finance Statistics HQ 11.04 11/12/2010 4/18/2011 5/13/2011 English STA

Macroeconomic Diagnostics HQ 11.03 10/1/2010 3/7/2011 4/1/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Diagnostics HQ 11.08 3/18/2011 8/22/2011 9/16/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy HQ 11.13 5/13/2011 10/20/2011 11/23/2011 French INS

Monetary and Financial Statistics HQ 11.10 4/22/2011 9/26/2011 10/21/2011 English STA

*Fluency in the language of instruction is a prerequisite for all courses.

page 10 |
DL
Distance Learning (DL)

Distance Learning (DL)

Eligible Countries: All IMF member countries excluding those few countries that have been declared ineligible for
technical assistance.

Selection Process: Distance segments of the DL courses are by application; all residential segment courses are by
invitation only. The DL application requirements are explained in the section on Administrative Arrangements.

Application: The online application can be accessed at www.imf.org/insapply for English courses, and www.imf.
org/ins/candidature for French. Any changes to the schedule will be posted promptly on the IMF Institute website.
Applicants to DL courses must apply online.

Training Schedule

Course Name Course Number Application Deadline Begin Date End Date Language* Location
Distance Segment DL 11.31 9/10/2010 1/10/2011 3/18/2011 English online

Residential Segment DL 11.32 Invitation 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 English Washington, DC

Distance Segment DL 11.33 3/11/2011 8/15/2011 10/21/2011 English online

Residential Segment DL 11.34 Invitation 11/28/2011 12/9/2011 English Vienna, Austria

Distance Segment DL 11.35 3/18/2011 8/22/2011 10/28/2011 French online

Residential Segment DL 11.36 Invitation 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 French Washington, DC

*Fluency in the language of instruction is a prerequisite for all courses.

Internal Economics Training

The IMF Institute, working closely with other IMF departments, organizes an Internal
Economics Training Program (IET) for IMF economists. This program provides short courses
and half-day seminars to IMF economists to strengthen and update their analytical skills.
Although the program is designed primarily for IMF staff, in some multi-day courses a limited
number of seats are offered to member-country officials, provided they can cover their
own expenses. The IMF Institute selects the countries to be invited to these courses. The
IMF Governor for each country is responsible for nominating the appropriate officials and
disseminating information to suitable candidates. The current schedule of IET courses and
seminars is available at www.imf.org/institute.

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Training Catalog 2011 page 11
BTC
Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America in Brazil (BTC)

T
he Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America in Website: The current schedule and a full description
Brazil (BTC) was established in 2001 by the Govern- of the courses and seminars offered by the IMF Institute
ment of Brazil and the IMF. Courses are generally of- at BTC are available at the IMF Institute website
fered in English and Spanish for government officials mainly www.imf.org/institute.
from Latin America.
Contact Information:
Eligible Countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Contact: Mr. Mauro Sérgio Bogéa Soares
Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Director
El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Address: Escola de Administração Fazendária
Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela.1 Estrada de Unaí – BR 251 KM 4
Brasilia – DF 71.686-900
Selection Process: Courses at BTC are by invitation Brazil
only. Candidates are nominated by government agencies Telephone: +55 (61) 3412-6107
upon the request of the responsible IMF department. +55 (61) 3412-6106
Fax: +55 (61) 3412-6022
1 Officials from the Lusophone countries of Africa (Angola, Cape Verde,
E-mail: ccb.df.esaf@fazenda.gov.br
Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, and São Tomé and Príncipe) may be invited
to selected courses.

Training Schedule

Course IMF
Course Name Number Begin Date End Date Language* Department

Balance of Payments Statistics BT 11.03 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 Spanish STA

Financial Markets and New Financial Instruments BT 11.01 2/14/2011 2/25/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Diagnostics BT 11.07 9/12/2011 9/23/2011 Spanish INS

Macroeconomic Forecasting BT 11.09 10/3/2011 10/14/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues BT 11.05 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 Spanish INS

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy BT 11.04 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 Spanish INS

National Accounts Statistics BT 11.02 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 Spanish STA

Price Statistics BT 11.08 9/19/2011 9/30/2011 English STA

Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop for Senior Officials BT 11.06 7/11/2011 7/15/2011 Spanish STA
*Fluency in the language of instruction is a prerequisite for all courses.

page 12 |
CTP
Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP)

I
n collaboration with the People’s Bank of China (PBC), Contact Information:
the IMF organizes courses in China for Chinese officials. Contact: Mr. Liu Pengpeng
The Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) began op- Director of the IMF Training Department,
erations in 2000. CTP
Address: Joint China-IMF Training Program in Dalian
Eligible Countries: China1 No. 68 Binhai West Road, Xingang District
Dalian 116013, Liaoning Province
Selection Process: Courses at CTP are open to People’s Republic of China
officials of the Chinese government and are by invitation Telephone: +86 (411) 8240-8840
only. Candidates are nominated by government agencies Fax: +86 (411) 8240-8843
upon the request of the responsible IMF department. Email: ctpinfo@imfctp.org

Website: The current schedule and a full description of


the courses and seminars offered by the IMF Institute at
CTP are available both at www.imfctp.org and at the
IMF Institute website www.imf.org/institute.

1 Includes Hong Kong SAR and Macao SAR.

Training Schedule

Course
Course Name Number Begin Date End Date Language* IMF Department

Balance of Payments Statistics CT 11.04 6/13/2011 6/24/2011 English (Chinese) STA

Government Finance Statistics CT 11.03 5/16/2011 5/27/2011 English (Chinese) STA

Macroeconomic Diagnostics CT 11.06 10/17/2011 10/28/2011 English (Chinese) INS

Macroeconomic Forecasting CT 11.02 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 English (Chinese) INS

Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues CT 11.01 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 English (Chinese) INS

Monetary and Financial Statistics CT 11.05 11/14/2011 12/2/2011 English (Chinese) STA

*Interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses. Fluency in the language of instruction or in the language of interpretation is a prerequisite for all courses.

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Training Catalog 2011 page 13
ITP
Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP)

T
he Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) in Pune, Contact Information:
India, is a cooperative venture of the Reserve Bank Contact: Mr. D.P. Sharma
of India (RBI) and the IMF with support from the ITP Administrator
government of Australia. This program was inaugurated in Address: Joint India-IMF Training Program in Pune
July 2006. ITP Centre, National Institute of Bank
Management
Eligible Countries: India, as well as certain other Kondhwe Khurd, Pune 411048
countries in South Asia and East Africa as designated India
jointly by RBI and IMF. Telephone: +91 (20) 2683-7425
+91 (20) 2683-7426
Selection Process: Courses at ITP are by invitation Fax: +91 (20) 2683-7427
only. Candidates are nominated by government agencies E-mail: itppune@imfrbi.nibmindia.org
upon the request of the responsible IMF department.

Website: The current schedule and a full description


of the courses offered by the IMF Institute at ITP are
available at both rbi.org.in/scripts/itp.aspx and the
IMF Institute website www.imf.org/institute.

Training Schedule

Course IMF
Course Name Number Begin Date End Date Language* Department

Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism IP 11.03 6/6/2011 6/10/2011 English LEG

Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism IP 11.04 7/11/2011 7/15/2011 English LEG

Financial Market Analysis IP 11.08 10/31/2011 11/11/2011 English INS

International Trade-in-Services Statistics IP 11.06 9/5/2011 9/9/2011 English STA

Macroeconomic Diagnostics IP 11.07 9/12/2011 9/23/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues IP 11.01 1/17/2011 1/28/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy IP 11.05 7/18/2011 7/29/2011 English INS

Monetary and Financial Statistics IP 11.02 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 English STA

*Fluency in the language of instruction is a prerequisite for all courses.

page 14 |
JPA
Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA)

T
he “Joint Partnership for Africa”—a partnership of the Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania,
African Development Bank and International Mone- Togo, Tunisia, Uganda, and Zambia.1
tary Fund was put in place in January 2010, replacing
the Joint Africa Institute. The “Joint Partnership for Africa” Selection Process: Participation is by invitation.
will be responsible for organizing training in Tunisia and in Candidates are nominated by government agencies
other locations in Africa. The IMF Institute will be the main upon the request for nominations by the responsible
sponsor of these courses which are offered in English and IMF department.
French.
Website: The current schedule and a full description
Eligible Countries: Algeria, Angola, Benin, of the courses offered by the IMF Institute are available
Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape at the IMF Institute website www.imf.org/institute.
Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros,
Congo, Dem. Rep. of, Congo, Rep. of, Côte d’Ivoire, Contact Information:
Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Contact: AfDB/IMF Training Coordinator
Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Address: c/o African Development Bank
Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, B. P. 323
Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, 1002 Tunis Belvédère, Tunisia
Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, E-mail: insinfo@imf.org
Rwanda, São Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal, Seychelles, 1 Officials from Haiti may be invited to selected French-language courses

Training Schedule

Course IMF
Course Name Number Begin Date End Date Language* Department
Balance of Payments Statistics JP 11.10 11/21/2011 12/2/2011 English (French) STA

Design, Sequencing, and Implementation of Public Financial


JP 11.08 10/31/2011 11/4/2011 English FAD
Management Reforms

Economic Policies for Financial Stability JP 11.09 11/7/2011 11/18/2011 English INS

Financial Programming and Policies JP 11.02 3/14/2011 3/25/2011 French INS

Financial Soundness Indicators JP 11.06 9/19/2011 9/30/2011 English STA

Macroeconomic Diagnostics JP 11.05 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 French INS

Macroeconomic Management and Debt Issues JP 11.01 1/24/2011 2/4/2011 French INS

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy JP 11.04 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 French INS

Macroeconomic Management in Natural Resource-Rich Countries JP 11.11 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 French INS

Monetary and Financial Statistics JP 11.03 4/11/2011 4/29/2011 French STA

Sovereign Liability Management – Principles and Practices JP 11.07 10/10/2011 10/14/2011 English MCM

*Fluency in the language of instruction is a prerequisite for all courses.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 15
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI)

T
he IMF Institute (INS) organizes courses for of- Selection Process: Courses are either by application
ficials from new European Union (EU) member or by invitation. Application requirements are described
countries and economies in transition in Europe in the section on Administrative Arrangements. For
and Asia at the Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) in Austria. courses by invitation, candidates are nominated
Supported by two Primary Members (IMF and the Aus- by government agencies upon the request of the
trian Authorities), four Contributing Members (European responsible IMF department.
Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD),
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development Application: The online application form can be
(IBRD), Organization for Economic Co-operation and accessed at www.imf.org/insapply.
Development (OECD), and the World Trade Organiza-
tion (WTO)), and other bilateral donors, the JVI was Website: The current schedule and a full description
started in 1992. Since late 2007, the European Commis- of the courses offered by the IMF Institute at JVI are
sion (EC) has had Observer Status. Starting in 2009, INS available at both www.jvi.org and the IMF Institute
has begun expanding its course offerings at the JVI to website www.imf.org/institute.
include more advanced courses in macroeconomics and
finance. These global courses are open to participants Contact Information:
from traditional JVI-eligible countries and to select par- Contact: Mr. Eduard H. Hochreiter
ticipants from elsewhere. Director
Address: Joint Vienna Institute
Eligible Countries: Albania, Armenia, Republic Mariahilfer Strasse 97
of Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, A-1060 Vienna
Bulgaria, Cambodia, China,1 Croatia, Czech Republic, Austria
Estonia, Georgia, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kyrgyz Telephone: +43 (1) 798-9495
Republic, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Latvia, Fax: +43 (1) 798-0525
Lithuania, Macedonia, FYR of, Moldova, Mongolia, E-mail: jvi@jvi.org
Montenegro, Myanmar, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia,
Slovakia, Slovenia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan,
Ukraine, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam.
1 Includes Hong Kong SAR and Macao SAR.

Training Schedule

Course Application IMF


Course Name Number Deadline Begin Date End Date Language* Department
Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing
JV 11.13 Invitation 5/9/2011 5/13/2011 English LEG
of Terrorism
Balance of Payments and International Investment
JV 11.19 Invitation 8/15/2011 8/26/2011 English (Russian) STA
Position
Central Banking & Financial Sector Regulation JV 11.16 Invitation 6/27/2011 7/8/2011 English (Russian) LEG

Economic Policies for Financial Stability JV 11.06 Invitation 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 English INS

Economic Policies for Financial Stability JV 11.22 Invitation 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 English INS

External Vulnerabilities JV 11.26 5/27/2011 10/24/2011 11/4/2011 English (Russian) INS

page 16 |
JVI
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI)

Financial Market Analysis JV 11.24 5/13/2011 10/10/2011 10/21/2011 English INS

Financial Markets and New Financial Instruments JV 11.14 Invitation 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 English INS

Financial Programming and Policies JV 11.08 11/5/2010 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 English (Russian) INS

Financial Programming and Policies JV 11.23 4/22/2011 9/19/2011 9/30/2011 English (Russian) INS

Financial Stability, Systemic Risk and Macro-Prudential


JV 11.04 Invitation 2/14/2011 2/23/2011 English MCM
Policy

Legal Aspects of International Financial Institutions JV 11.09 Invitation 4/18/2011 4/22/2011 English (Russian) LEG

Macroeconomic Diagnostics JV 11.10 11/19/2010 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Diagnostics JV 11.27 6/10/2011 11/7/2011 11/18/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Forecasting JV 11.11 11/26/2010 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 English INS

Macroeconomic Forecasting JV 11.28 7/1/2011 11/28/2011 12/9/2011 English INS


Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector
JV 11.03 10/1/2010 2/14/2011 2/25/2011 English (Russian) INS
Issues
Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector
JV 11.25 5/13/2011 10/10/2011 10/21/2011 English (Russian) INS
Issues
Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy JV 11.01 9/3/2010 1/17/2011 1/28/2011 English (Russian) INS

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy JV 11.18 2/25/2011 7/25/2011 8/5/2011 English (Russian) INS
Macroeconomic Management in Natural Resource-
JV 11.02 9/17/2010 1/31/2011 2/11/2011 English (Russian) INS
Rich Countries
Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy JV 11.12 12/10/2010 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 English (Russian) INS

Monetary Policy Analysis JV 11.20 3/25/2011 8/22/2011 9/2/2011 English INS


Mortgage Markets, Securitization, and Structured
JV 11.15 Invitation 6/20/2011 6/24/2011 English INS
Finance
Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop JV 11.21 Invitation 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 English (Russian) STA
Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop for G20+
JV 11.05 Invitation 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 English STA
Countries
Real Property Taxation JV 11.17 Invitation 7/18/2011 7/22/2011 English (Russian) FAD
Safeguards Assessments of Central Banks JV 11.07 Invitation 4/4/2011 4/8/2011 English FIN

*Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses. Fluency in the language of instruction or in the language of simultaneous interpretation is a prerequisite for all
courses.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 17
RTP
IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP)

T
he IMF and the Arab Monetary Fund (AMF) es- Website: The current schedule and a full description
tablished the Regional Training Program (RTP) to of the courses offered by the IMF Institute at RTP are
increase and coordinate the training offered to their available at www.amf.org.ae and the IMF Institute
member countries in the Middle East and North Africa re- website www.imf.org/institute.
gion. The RTP, which is located at AMF headquarters in Abu
Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, started operations in 1999. Contact Information:
Contact: Dr. Saud Al Braikan
Eligible Countries: Algeria, Bahrain, Comoros, Director
Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libyan Address: Economic Policy Institute
Arab Jamahiriya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Arab Monetary Fund
Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, Tunisia, P. O. Box 2818
United Arab Emirates, West Bank and Gaza,1 and Abu Dhabi
Republic of Yemen. United Arab Emirates
Telephone: +971 (2) 621-5000
Selection Process: Courses are by invitation only. Fax: +971 (2) 632-6454
Candidates are nominated by government agencies E-mail: epidirector@amfad.org.ae
upon the request of the AMF in consultation with the
IMF Institute.

1 Not a member country, but eligible for technical assistance and training.

Training Schedule

Course
Course Name Number Begin Date End Date Language* IMF Department
Design, Sequencing and Implementation of Public Financial
RT 11.05 4/3/2011 4/7/2011 English (Arabic) FAD
Management Reforms
External Vulnerabilities RT 11.03 2/27/2011 3/10/2011 Arabic INS

Financial Market Analysis RT 11.01 1/23/2011 2/3/2011 English INS

Financial Programming and Policies RT 11.06 4/17/2011 4/28/2011 Arabic INS

Financial Soundness Indicators RT 11.02 2/6/2011 2/17/2011 English (Arabic) STA

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy RT 11.04 3/13/2011 3/24/2011 Arabic INS

*Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses. Fluency in the language of instruction or in the language of simultaneous interpretation is a prerequisite for all
courses.

page 18 |
STI
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI)

I
n collaboration with the Government of Singapore, the Application: The online application can be accessed
IMF Institute organizes courses for officials from countries at www.imf.org/insapply. Any changes in the course
in the Asia/Pacific region at the IMF-Singapore Regional schedule will be posted promptly on the IMF Institute
Training Institute (STI). This program was inaugurated in website.
1998.
Website: The current schedule and a full description
Eligible Countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, of the courses and seminars offered by the IMF Institute
Bhutan, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, China,1 Fiji, at STI are available at both www.imfsti.org and the
India, Indonesia, Iran, Islamic Republic of, Kiribati, IMF Institute website www.imf.org/institute.
Republic of Korea, Lao People’s Democratic Republic,
Malaysia, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Contact Information:
Micronesia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Palau, Contact: Mr. Sunil Sharma
Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Samoa, Singapore, Director
Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Address: IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute
Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, and Vietnam.2 10 Shenton Way
MAS Building 14-03
Selection Process: Courses are either by application Singapore 079117
or by invitation. Application requirements are described Singapore
in the section on Administrative Arrangements. For Telephone: +65 6225-5311
courses by invitation, candidates are nominated Fax: +65 6225-6080
by government agencies upon the request of the E-mail: stiinfo@imf.org
responsible IMF department.

1 Includes Hong Kong SAR and Macao SAR.


2 Officials from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan, and small non-member Pacific Island countries may be
invited to selected courses.

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Training Catalog 2011 page 19
STI
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI)

Training Schedule

Course Application
Course Name* Number Deadline Begin Date End Date IMF Department

Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism ST 11.03 Invitation 3/7/2011 3/11/2011 LEG

Balance of Payments Statistics ST 11.02 Invitation 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 STA

Central Banking and Financial Sector Legislation ST 11.17 Invitation 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 LEG

Design Sequencing and Implementation of Public Financial Management


ST 11.13 Invitation 7/11/2011 7/15/2011 FAD
Reform

Economic Policies for Financial Stability ST 11.16 Invitation 8/15/2011 8/26/2011 INS

Financial Market Analysis ST 11.08 11/19/2010 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 INS

Financial Markets and New Financial Instruments ST 11.20 Invitation 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 INS

Financial Programming and Policies ST 11.51 8/13/2010 1/10/2011 1/21/2011 INS

Financial Programming and Policies ST 11.11 1/14/2011 6/13/2011 6/24/2011 INS

Financial Programming and Policies ST 11.06 Invitation 3/28/2011 4/8/2011 INS

Financial Soundness Indicators ST 11.15 Invitation 8/1/2011 8/12/2011 STA

Financial Stability, Systemic Risk and Macro-Prudential Policy ST 11.01 Invitation 1/10/2011 1/19/2011 MCM

Macroeconomic Diagnostics ST 11.10 12/10/2010 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 INS

Macroeconomic Forecasting ST 11.05 10/22/2010 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 INS

Macroeconomic Implications of Fiscal Issues ST 11.53 6/17/2011 11/14/2011 11/25/2011 INS

Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues ST 11.14 Invitation 7/25/2011 8/5/2011 INS

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy ST 11.04 10/15/2010 3/14/2011 3/25/2011 INS

Macroeconomic Management for Senior Officials ST 11.52 12/24/2010 5/23/2011 5/27/2011 INS

Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy ST 11.12 2/4/2011 7/4/2011 7/15/2011 INS

Mortgage Markets, Securitization, and Structured Finance ST 11.19 Invitation 11/28/2011 12/2/2011 INS

National Accounts Statistics ST 11.07 Invitation 4/11/2011 4/22/2011 STA

Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop for Senior Officials ST 11.18 Invitation 10/24/2011 10/28/2011 STA

Risk-Based Banking Supervision ST 11.09 11/26/2010 4/25/2011 4/29/2011 MCM

Safeguards Assessments of Central Banks ST 11.21 Invitation 12/5/2011 12/9/2011 FIN

*All courses at the STI are taught in English, and fluency in English is a prerequisite.

page 20 |
OT
Other Training (OT)

I
n addition to providing training at Headquarters and the regional training centers, the IMF Institute delivers many of
its two-week courses at the IMF’s regional technical assistance centers and various other venues, often in collabora-
tion with other regional training organizations. Over 20 course deliveries at OT venues are planned for 2011, including
offerings in Arabic, English, French, and Spanish. To a large extent, the Institute’s capacity to deliver this “other training”
depends on the availability of financial support from hosts or donors. These courses are generally scheduled after the
courses at Headquarters and the IMF’s six regional training centers. They are listed in this catalog, but the dates are
subject to change. Details of location and latest information on dates are made available on the IMF Institute website
www.imf.org/institute as arrangements become firm. All OT courses are by invitation.

Training Schedule

Course
Region Course Name Number Begin Date End Date Language*
Africa External Vulnerabilities OT 11.12 7/4/2011 7/15/2011 French

Africa External Vulnerabilities OT 11.15 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 English

Africa Financial Market Analysis OT 11.04 2/7/2011 2/18/2011 English

Africa Financial Programming and Policies OT 11.01 1/31/2011 2/11/2011 English

Africa Financial Programming and Policies OT 11.13 8/1/2011 8/12/2011 French

Africa Macroeconomic Diagnostics OT 11.11 6/27/2011 7/8/2011 English

Africa Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues OT 11.08 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 French

Africa Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues OT 11.09 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 English

Africa Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy OT 11.17 10/3/2011 10/14/2011 English

Africa Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy OT 11.19 10/24/2011 11/4/2011 English

Asia Economic Policies for Financial Stability OT 11.06 3/28/2011 4/8/2011 English

Asia Financial Programming and Policies OT 11.31 2/7/2011 2/18/2011 English

Asia Macroeconomic Diagnostics OT 11.32 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 English

Asia Macro-Financial Surveillance OT 11.20 11/7/2011 11/18/2011 English

Central Asia Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues OT 11.14 8/8/2011 8/19/2011 English (Russian)

Central Asia Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy OT 11.05 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 English (Russian)

Europe Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues OT 11.10 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 English

Europe Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues OT 11.16 9/5/2011 9/13/2011 English

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 21
OT
Other Training (OT)

Training Schedule (continued)

Course
Region Course Name Number Begin Date End Date Language*
Middle East Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism OT 11.304 10/9/2011 10/13/2011 English

Middle East Balance of Payments and International Investment Position OT 11.301 5/8/2011 5/19/2011 English (Arabic)

Middle East Financial Programming and Policies OT 11.22 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 Arabic

Middle East Macroeconomic Diagnostics OT 11.302 5/29/2011 6/9/2011 English

Middle East Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues OT 11.306 11/27/2011 12/8/2011 Arabic

Middle East Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy OT 11.303 6/12/2011 6/23/2011 Arabic

Middle East National Accounts Statistics OT 11.305 10/16/2011 10/27/2011 English (Arabic)

Western Hemisphere Macroeconomic Diagnostics OT 11.07 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 Spanish

Western Hemisphere Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy OT 11.03 2/7/2011 2/18/2011 English

Western Hemisphere Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy OT 11.21 11/28/2011 12/9/2011 Spanish

Western Hemisphere Mortgage Markets, Securitization, and Structured Finance OT 11.18 10/17/2011 10/21/2011 English

Western Hemisphere The Use of DSGE Models in the Policy-Making Process OT 11.02 1/31/2011 2/4/2011 English

*Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses. Fluency in the language of instruction or in the language of simultaneous interpretation is a prerequisite for all
courses.

page 22 |
Course Descriptions
The following is a consolidated list of the courses offered
at Headquarters, the regional training centers, and other
training venues around the world by the IMF Institute
and other IMF departments during calendar year 2011,
presented in alphabetical order by course title followed by
a table listing locations and dates for each course. For the
latest information on the schedule please visit the IMF Institute
website at www.imf.org/institute.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 23
Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML-CFT)

Target Audience: Officials responsible for AML/CFT matters.

Qualifications: Attendance is by invitation only. Prerequisites are specified in invitation letters.

Course Description: These one-week workshops, presented by the IMF’s Legal Department, are designed for government
officials involved in the AML/CFT frameworks of their countries’ and are intended to improve the legal and institutional ca-
pacity of these frameworks. The workshops will involve government officials in practical and hands-on exercises designed
to enhance their expertise in effectively implementing their countries AML/CFT legal and institutional requirements.

Application
Location Begin Date End Date Language † deadline
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 3/7/2011 3/11/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 5/9/2011 5/13/2011 English By Invitation

Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 6/6/2011 6/10/2011 English By Invitation

Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 7/11/2011 7/15/2011 English By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT/RTP) in the Middle East* 10/9/2011 10/13/2011 English (Arabic) By Invitation

Balance of Payments Statistics (BPS)


(Six-week BPS)

Target Audience: Officials whose main responsibility is compiling balance of payments and/or international investment
position statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This six-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, provides training on the meth-
odology for collecting and compiling balance of payments and international investment position statistics based on the
new Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual, sixth edition. It consists of a series of lectures,
discussions, practical exercises, and case studies. Lectures and class discussions focus on general concepts and compilation
practices, while exercises provide participants with an opportunity to put acquired knowledge into practice. During the case
studies and plenary session discussions, participants have the opportunity to discuss problems they encountered in their
work on the compilation of balance of payments and international investment position statistics in their respective countries.

The course covers:


• the conceptual framework of the balance of payments and international investment position, including the double-
entry system; concepts of economic territory, residence, and center of economic interest; principles for valuation
and time of recording; and the unit of account and conversion;
• classification and coverage of the standard components of the balance of payments and the international investment
position, including goods, services, primary and secondary income, capital transfers, direct investment, portfolio
investment, financial derivatives, other investment, and reserve assets;

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.


† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 24 |
• data sources and methods used to collect and compile the statistics, including the use of administrative data,
enterprise surveys (including survey design and sampling methods), and use of an international transactions
reporting system; and
• other topics, including external debt statistics, the relationship between balance of payments statistics and other
macroeconomic statistics, dissemination standards, analysis and use of balance of payments statistics, and assessing
the quality of balance of payments statistics through reference to the IMF’s Data Quality Assessment Framework
developed for the balance of payments.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 5/9/2011 6/17/2011 English 12/3/2010

Balance of Payments Statistics (BPS)


(Two-week BPS)

Target Audience: Officials whose main responsibility is compiling balance of payments and/or international investment
position statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, provides training on the meth-
odology for collecting and compiling balance of payments and international investment position statistics based on the
IMF’s sixth edition of the Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual. It consists of a series of lec-
tures, discussions, and practical exercises. Lectures and class discussions focus on general concepts and compilation prac-
tices, while exercises provide participants with an opportunity to put knowledge learned into practice. During the course,
participants have the opportunity to discuss problems they encountered in their work on the compilation of balance of
payments and international investment position statistics in their respective countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application deadline


IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 Spanish By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT/RTP) in the Middle East* 5/8/2011 5/19/2011 English (Arabic) By Invitation

Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) – Dalian, China 6/13/2011 6/24/2011 English (Chinese) By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 8/15/2011 8/26/2011 English (Russian) By Invitation

Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 11/21/2011 12/2/2011 English(French) By Invitation

Central Banking and Financial Sector Legislation (FTL)

Target Audience: Lawyers from transition and emerging market economies that are involved in central banking, payment
system oversight, financial sector regulations/supervision, or bank resolution.

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.


† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 25
Qualifications: By invitation only. The IMF’s Legal Department will contact the authorities for their nominations, and then
select participants from among the candidates nominated.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF’s Legal Department, focuses on the institutional and
legal infrastructure that is necessary to support market-based financial systems, a selection of which will be discussed dur-
ing the course. It therefore covers basic institutional and functional aspects of central banking, financial system oversight,
payment system oversight, banking regulation/supervision, capital market transactions, and bank resolution.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 6/27/2011 7/8/2011 English (Russian) By Invitation
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 English By Invitation

Design, Sequencing, and Implementation of


NEW
Public Financial Management Reform (PFMR)

Target Audience: Senior budget and expenditure management staff of ministries of finance, planning ministries, and other
ministries.

Qualifications: Participants should have extensive (10-15 years) work experience in central government, with at least 5
years in the budget or expenditure management fields.

Course Description: This one-week course, presented by the IMF’s Fiscal Affairs Department, aims to provide participants
insight in the process of public financial management reform in developing countries. The main aims, approaches, chal-
lenges and management of effective reform processes will be discussed. The course will combine background lectures, case
studies and group exercises. The course will start off with a discussion of the main objectives of Public Financial Manage-
ment (PFM) reform, related to the most common budget and treasury management issues faced by developing countries.
The various diagnostic instruments for assessing strengths and weaknesses in PFM systems will be discussed, including the
Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability (PEFA) diagnostic framework. The pros and cons of typical Public Financial
Management reform roadmaps will be reviewed, including the “Basics First” approach, IT system-driven PFM reform, and
the World Bank platform approach. Case studies will challenge participants to mimic the strategy formulation process lead-
ing to country-specific PFM reform agendas. Sequencing issues in PFM reforms will be discussed with regard to multi-year
and performance budgeting, government accounting and budget execution. The final day will discuss the management of
reform processes, in part based on case studies; specific implementation issues and challenges will be discussed with regard
to various PFM reform components.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application deadline


IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP) – Abu Dhabi,
4/3/2011 4/7/2011 English (Arabic) By Invitation
United Arab Emirates

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 7/11/2011 7/15/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 10/31/2011 11/4/2011 English By Invitation

† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 26 |
Economic Policies for Financial Stability (EFS)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials in central banks, finance ministries, and regulatory agencies who are
involved in the formulation of macroeconomic and financial policies.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course offered by the IMF Institute, occasionally in collaboration with other international
and regional organizations, examines macroeconomic and micro-prudential policies to safeguard financial stability. It explores the
macroeconomic causes, consequences, and policy responses to stress in financial markets and banking systems, and distills policy
lessons from recent crises. Particular attention is paid to the interaction among the macroeconomic, financial, supervisory and reg-
ulatory frameworks. Early warning systems, techniques for assessing financial stability (including stress testing), and financial risk
management are also addressed. Participants may be asked to make short presentations on topics of interest in their countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 English By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Asia* 3/28/2011 4/8/2011 English By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 8/15/2011 8/26/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 11/7/2011 11/18/2011 English By Invitation

External Debt Statistics (EDS)

Target Audience: Officials whose main responsibility is the compilation of external debt statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This four-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics department, is intended to provide partici-
pants with a thorough understanding of the conceptual framework for the compilation of external debt statistics and with
practical guidance on the collection and analysis of these data. It comprises lectures, practical exercises, and case studies.
The text for the course is the External Debt Statistics: Guide for Compilers and Users (Debt Guide). The course covers
• the conceptual framework for compiling the range of external debt data series recommended in the Debt Guide
and how they relate to the principles of balance of payments, international investment position, government
finance, and national accounts methodology;
• practical guidance in the compilation of external debt data for the public and private sectors, including the
institutional arrangements for the compilation of these data and international sources of external debt statistics;
• the requirements for external debt statistics under the IMF’s data dissemination standards, including the World
Bank’s quarterly external debt statistics (QEDS) database;
• the interrelation of external debt statistics with the public sector debt template; and
• the various uses of external debt statistics and methods of data quality control, including case studies on the
implementation of the IMF’s Data Quality Assessment Framework for external debt statistics, and lectures on debt

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 27
restructuring and debt sustainability analysis. Participants from each country represented are expected to prepare a
short paper in advance on external debt compilation in their own country, for discussion during the course.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 8/29/2011 9/23/2011 English 3/25/2011

External Vulnerabilities (EXV)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior- level officials from central banks and government agencies involved in the design and
implementation of policies that have an impact on the soundness of their country’s external position.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, draws upon the latest work of the Fund to
provide participants with a comprehensive set of analytical tools for assessing external vulnerabilities and designing ap-
propriate policy responses. These tools will allow participants to evaluate a wide range of external debt, foreign exchange
reserve management, capital account liberalization, and foreign aid management policies. Participants will sharpen their
skills with hands on exercises, as well as presentations on specific aspects of external vulnerabilities based on their coun-
tries’ experience.

The course is divided into three modules:


1. Current account sustainability analysis, linking current account and external debt dynamics;
2. The role of financial assets shocks in triggering large changes in external financial flows; and
3. Capital account liberalization and international aid as potential sources of volatility in the balance of payments.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application deadline


IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP) – Abu Dhabi, United Arab
2/27/2011 3/10/2011 Arabic By Invitation
Emirates

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 7/4/2011 7/15/2011 French By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 10/24/2011 11/4/2011 English 5/27/2011

Finance for Macroeconomists (FME)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials in central banks, ministries of finance, and regulatory agencies.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience, and it is
important that they are proficient in the use of spreadsheets.

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

page 28 |
Course Description: This four-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, examines the role and functions of financial
markets and institutions, and their linkages to the macroeconomy. The course begins with an overview of the characteristics
of financial instruments and their pricing, as well as investors’ portfolio and risk management decisions. It then examines
the analytical tools and methods used to extract information about macroeconomic variables from financial prices, as well
as to assess the soundness of financial systems and their linkages to macroeconomic activity. Topics include:
• money and capital market instruments;
• bond pricing and credit risk;
• equity pricing and portfolio theory;
• extracting information from the term structure of interest rates;
• introduction to derivatives and their pricing;
• elements of risk management and models;
• finance and business cycles;
• banking and financial crises; and
• financial soundness indicators and stress testing.

Workshops are an integral part of the course, and require participants to apply some of the techniques presented in lec-
tures. Participants may also be asked to make short presentations on topics of interest in their countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 5/2/2011 5/27/2011 English By Invitation

Financial Market Analysis (FMA)

Target Audience: Junior to mid-level officials in central banks, ministries of finance, and regulatory agencies.

Qualifications: Participants are expected have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience. No background
in finance is assumed, but participants must have some familiarity with basic techniques in statistics and probability. It is es-
sential that participants be able to use Microsoft Excel.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, introduces participants to the fundamentals of
financial analysis that are part of the toolkit of policymakers. These tools are used to study the characteristics of various finan-
cial instruments and their pricing, as well as to analyze portfolios of assets and the basics of risk management. Topics include:
• bond pricing and volatility--duration and convexity;
• term structure of interest rates;
• equity pricing;
• asset allocation and diversification; and
• value at risk.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 29
Workshops, which are an integral part of the course, require participants to apply the techniques presented.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application deadline


IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP) – Abu Dhabi,
1/23/2011 2/3/2011 English By Invitation
United Arab Emirates

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 2/7/2011 2/18/2011 English By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 English 11/19/2010

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 10/10/2011 10/21/2011 English 5/13/2011

Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 10/31/2011 11/11/2011 English By Invitation

Financial Markets and New Financial Instruments (FMN)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials in central banks, ministries of finance, and regulatory agencies.

Qualifications: Participants should be familiar with topics covered in the course on Financial Market Analysis (FMA).

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, explores the nature of financial intermedia-
tion, the role of financial markets and institutions in the allocation of resources, and the need for regulatory mechanisms
to create the appropriate incentives for all participants in the financial system. The course pays particular attention to the
emergence of derivative markets and instruments, analyzing the conceptual bases of the new instruments, including their
pricing and trading strategies, as well as how financial entities use them in risk management. Topics include:
• the nature of financial markets and instruments;
• derivatives and their pricing (futures, forwards, swaps, options, credit derivatives);
• securitization and structured finance
• commercial bank risk management;
• market and credit risk models;
• regulation of banks, securities markets, and derivatives; and
• the origin and nature of financial crises.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application deadline

Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 2/14/2011 2/25/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 English By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 English By Invitation

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

page 30 |
Financial Programming and Policies (FPP)
(Five-week FPP)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials primarily in such ministries as finance, economy, and planning, or in central
banks who provide advice on macroeconomic and financial policy or who are involved in policy implementation.

Qualifications: Applicants are expected to have a degree in economics (preferably advanced) or equivalent experience,
along with proficiency in the use of spreadsheets.

Course Description: This five-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims at extending participants’ understanding of
the design and implementation of macroeconomic and financial policies, drawing on the Fund’s experience in economic sur-
veillance, the design of financial programs, and the provision of technical advice to member countries. The course covers:
• the principal features of the different accounts used in macroeconomic analysis (i.e., the national income, balance
of payments, fiscal, and monetary accounts) and the interrelations among these accounts, and forecasting methods
for each sector;
• the diagnosis of macroeconomic performance and analysis of the effects of macroeconomic and structural policies
on the main variables of interest to policymakers, including output, prices, and the balance of payments; and
• the preparation of a macroeconomic policy program.

The course material is presented in a framework that emphasizes the complementarities between macroeconomic stabiliza-
tion policies and structural reforms and the importance of policy coordination for sustained growth. Selected macroeconom-
ic and structural adjustment programs implemented by member countries are used to illustrate how policies can be adapted
to changing economic circumstances.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 1/24/2011 2/25/2011 English 8/20/2010

IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 2/21/2011 3/25/2011 French 9/17/2010

IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 6/6/2011 7/8/2011 English 12/31/2010

IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 10/3/2011 11/4/2011 Arabic 4/29/2011

Financial Programming and Policies (FPP)


(Two-week FPP)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials—primarily in such ministries as finance, economy, and planning, or in cen-
tral banks—who provide advice on macroeconomic and financial policy or who are involved in policy implementation.

Qualifications: Applicants are expected to have a degree in economics (preferably advanced) or equivalent experience,
along with proficiency in the use of spreadsheets.

Course Description: This two-week course is a condensed version of the five-week FPP course offered at IMF headquar-
ters in Washington D.C. The course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims at extending participants’ understanding of the

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 31
design and implementation of macroeconomic and financial policies, drawing on the IMF’s experience in economic surveil-
lance, the design of financial programs, and the provision of technical advice to member countries. The course covers:
• the principal features of the different accounts used in macroeconomic analysis (i.e., the national income, balance
of payments, fiscal, and monetary accounts), the interrelations among these accounts, and forecasting methods for
each sector;
• the diagnosis of macroeconomic performance and analysis of the effects of macroeconomic and structural policies
on the main variables of interest to policymakers, including output, prices, and the balance of payments; and
• the preparation of a macroeconomic policy program.

The course material is presented in a framework that emphasizes the complementarity of macroeconomic stabilization policies
and structural reforms and the importance of policy coordination for sustained growth. Selected macroeconomic and struc-
tural adjustment programs implemented by member countries are used to illustrate how policies can be adapted to changing
economic circumstances. The course includes a series of workshops in which participants are divided into groups, under the
guidance of counselors, to develop sectoral forecasts and prepare macroeconomic policy programs for a case study country.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 1/10/2011 1/21/2011 English 8/13/2010

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 1/31/2011 2/11/2011 English By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Asia* 2/7/2011 2/18/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 3/14/2011 3/25/2011 French By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 3/28/2011 4/8/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 English 11/5/2010

IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP) – Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates 4/17/2011 4/28/2011 Arabic By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 6/13/2011 6/24/2011 English 1/14/2011

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 8/1/2011 8/12/2011 French By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 9/19/2011 9/30/2011 English 4/22/2011

Other Training Venue (OT) in the Middle East* 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 Arabic By Invitation

Financial Programming and Policies-Inflation Targeting (FPP-IT)

Target Audience: Senior officials from central banks and ministries of finance and the economy who provide advice on
macroeconomic and financial policy or who are involved in policy implementation.

Qualifications: Applicants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience, as well as proficiency
in the use of spreadsheets.

Course Description: This five-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, uses the main building blocks of a standard
FPP course—sector interrelations and adjustment policies—but places significant emphasis on analytical and technical is-
sues related to an Inflation Targeting (IT) monetary framework and the channels of monetary transmission. Special attention
is given to how central bankers following an IT strategy respond to macroeconomic disequilibria arising from domestic and
external shocks, and to the attendant effects on output and inflation.

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

page 32 |
The course includes lectures on the main policy issues underlying adjustment programs, emphasizing complementarities
and coordination among policies. Case studies are presented on current economic issues and on the experiences of coun-
tries that have adopted an IT framework. The course includes a series of workshops in which participants are divided into
groups, under the guidance of counselors, to work on analytical and forecasting techniques for the macroeconomic sectors
and on various specialized topics, including IT techniques. The final part of the course is devoted to the preparation of a
hypothetical adjustment program for an IT country from Latin America.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 10/17/2011 11/18/2011 Spanish 5/13/2011

Financial Programming and Policies through Distance Learning (FPP-DL)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials primarily in such ministries as finance, economy, and planning, or in central
banks who provide advice on macroeconomic and financial policy or who are involved in policy implementation.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have a degree in economics (preferably advanced) or equivalent experience.
Proficiency in the use of spreadsheets and a reliable internet connection are essential to the course.

Applicants for the course must attest in writing that they have computer access and the following skills, equipment and software:
• e-mail account and experience in electronic file transmission over the internet;
• proficiency in working with Excel spreadsheets; and
• computer with a CD-ROM drive, sound card, Windows (98 or more recent edition), Excel, Word, and internet access.

Course Description: The course is designed to address the training needs of officials who are unable to attend long
courses away from their jobs. It consists of a ten-week computer-based distance learning segment, which allows participants
to remain on the job while studying part-time, followed by a two-week residential segment. During the distance-learning
segment, participants interact on a continuing basis with their course counselors, and are also able to interact electronically
through a discussion forum on the DL website with other participants around the world (whom they will later meet during
the residential segment). Participants are expected to be given time by their supervisors to work on the course materials and
submit their assignments on schedule. Only those participants, who successfully complete the distance-learning segment,
including all assignments, are invited to the residential workshop.

In comparison with the five-week FPP, this course focuses more on accounts, analysis, forecasting, and basic financial pro-
gramming skills. The distance-learning segment covers the macroeconomic accounts and their interrelationships; the main
policies affecting macroeconomic performance; techniques for forecasting macroeconomic variables; and the preparation of a
baseline scenario for the case study country. During the residential learning segment, participants attend lectures on relevant
topics; finalize the baseline scenario for the case study country; and prepare an adjustment program for the case study country.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Distance Segment 1/10/2011 3/18/2011 English 9/10/2010
Residential Segment – Washington, DC 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 English By Invitation
Distance Segment 8/15/2011 10/21/2011 English 3/11/2011
Distance Segment 8/22/2011 10/28/2011 French 3/18/2011
Residential Segment – Vienna, Austria 11/28/2011 12/9/2011 English By Invitation
Residential Segment – Washington, DC 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 French By Invitation

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 33
Financial Soundness Indicators (FSI)

Target Audience: Officials at central banks and supervisory agencies for the financial sector who are involved in the col-
lection, compilation, and analysis of financial soundness indicators.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics, or the equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics department, covers concepts and definitions,
data sources, and techniques for the compilation of Financial Soundness Indicators (FSIs) that serve to support macropruden-
tial analysis. It covers the fundamental aspects of the methodology for the construction of FSIs (such as coverage, aggregation,
consolidation, valuation) as contained in the Financial Soundness Indicators Compilation Guide, including its 2007 amend-
ments. It introduces the new FSI Template for use in the regular reporting of FSI data and metadata to the IMF and provides
guidance in accessing and using the IMF’s database for FSI data and metadata. The course also provides information on the
use of FSIs in financial sector surveillance. The topics are covered through lectures and workshops (hands-on exercises on the
compilation of FSIs).

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP) – Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates 2/6/2011 2/17/2011 English (Arabic) By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 8/1/2011 8/12/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 9/19/2011 9/30/2011 English By Invitation

Financial Stability, Systemic Risk, and Macro-Prudential Policy (FSMP) NEW

Target Audience: Officials involved in financial regulation or financial stability analysis from central banks (or ministries
of finance).

Qualifications: Participants are expected have an advanced degree in economics, finance or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department, is designed
for central bankers and financial regulators to provide up-to date information on the identification of risks that can threaten
the stability of the financial system, and approaches to mitigating these risks. The course draws on the on the lessons, and
the international policy and regulatory responses, to the recent financial crisis.

The topics covered will include:


• Role, objectives and lessons for the design of financial stability analysis and macro-prudential policy in light of the
recent financial crisis;
• Quantitative techniques for the identification and assessment of macro-financial and systemic risks:
• modeling systemic default and liquidity risk,
• contingent claims analysis (CCA) and systemic CCA with applications,
• comparison of systemic risk modeling and how the models are related to each other, and
• interaction of financial sector and sovereign risk;
• Designing financial stability reports and communication strategies;

† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 34 |
• Approaches to mitigating systemic risks, including international regulatory initiatives on systemic risk charges,
extending the perimeter of regulation, and the design of crisis management arrangements; and
• Institutional arrangements, including the role of systemic risk regulators, and collaboration cross border and
internationally.

In addition to a series of lectures, participants of the course will be invited to share relevant national experiences in ad-
dressing the above topics.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 1/10/2011 1/19/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 2/14/2011 2/23/2011 English By Invitation

Government Finance Statistics (GFS)


(Four-week GFS)

Target Audience: Officials whose main responsibility is compiling public finance statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This four-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, focuses on the conceptual
framework of government finance statistics (GFS) as presented in the IMF’s Government Finance Statistics Manual 2001,
as well as on the practical aspects of data compilation. Basic concepts, accounting principles, and detailed classifications
are dealt with in the context of the new methodology that is harmonized with the system of national accounts. The course
examines the coverage and accounting rules of the GFS framework (including accrual accounting), valuation, classification,
debt, balance sheets, and the sources and methods used for compiling the statistics. It also deals with data reporting to the
IMF. The course is organized around a series of case studies.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 4/18/2011 5/13/2011 English 11/12/2010

Government Finance Statistics (GFS)


(Two-week GFS)

Target Audience: Officials whose main responsibility is compiling public finance statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics, or the equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, focuses on the conceptual
framework of government finance statistics (GFS) as presented in the IMF’s Government Finance Statistics Manual 2001,
as well as on the practical aspects of data compilation. Basic concepts, accounting principles, and detailed classifications
are dealt with in the context of the new methodology that is harmonized with the system of national accounts. The course

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 35
examines the coverage and accounting rules of the GFS framework (including accrual accounting), valuation, classification,
debt, balance sheets, and the sources and methods used for compiling the statistics. It also deals with data reporting to the
IMF. The course is organized around a series of case studies.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) – Dalian, China 5/16/2011 5/27/2011 English (Chinese) By Invitation

International Trade-In-Services Statistics (ITS)

Target Audience: Officials from central banks or national statistical offices who are responsible for compiling statistics on
international trade in services.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics or equivalent experience. Training or experience in com-
piling balance of payments or national accounts statistics would also be useful.

Course Description: This one-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, takes a much broader and more
detailed approach to international trade-in services than the approach outlined in the sixth edition of the Balance of Pay-
ments Manual. It consists of lectures, discussions, and workshops based on structured exercises. It covers:
• the conceptual framework for recording international trade in services based on the Manual on Statistics of
International Trade in Services;
• the modes of supplying data on international trade in services;
• international trade in services data sources and compilation practices;
• recent developments in statistics on international trade in services;
• the uses of statistics on international trade in services; and
• the compilation of foreign affiliates’ statistics (FATS).

Participants are expected to prepare in advance, a short presentation on their country compilation practices.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline

Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 9/5/2011 9/9/2011 English By Invitation

Legal Aspects of International Financial Institutions (LAIF)

Target Audience: Senior lawyers from countries with emerging market economies who are responsible for legal aspects of
their countries’ current or prospective membership in international financial institutions.

Qualifications: By invitation only; the IMF’s Legal Department will contact the authorities for their nominations, and then
select participants from among the candidates nominated.

† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 36 |
Course Description: This one-week course, presented by the IMF’s Legal Department, covers legal, institutional and opera-
tional aspects of international financial institutions (including the IMF, the Bank of International Settlements, and the World
Bank), and explores the linkages and relationships between these institutions. Institutions to be covered each year may vary.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 4/18/2011 4/22/2011 English (Russian) By Invitation

Macroeconomic Diagnostics (MDS)


(Four-week MDS)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials, either in central banks or in ministries such as finance and economy, who
are closely involved in assessing overall macroeconomic developments and prospects.

Qualifications: Applicants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience, good quantitative
skills, and proficiency in the use of computers to analyze data.

Course Description: This course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims at strengthening the ability of participants to assess a
country’s macroeconomic situation, emphasizing practical tools for use in day-to-day macroeconomic analysis of developments
in complex economies. The course draws heavily on actual country experiences and focuses on diagnostic and analytic tools
that typically are not well covered in macroeconomics textbooks or in university courses. The lectures cover three broad areas:
• Understanding the current state of the macroeconomy. This module considers tools that can be used for analyzing
current developments in aggregate demand and supply, inflation, the labor market, and the external sector.
• Assessing medium-term flows, balance-sheet effects, and sustainability. This module examines tools for analyzing the
macroeconomy in a medium-term setting, including evaluation of the government’s financial position, competitiveness
and the exchange rate, the country’s external position, and corporate and financial sector balance sheets.
• Measuring the macroeconomic effects of policy. The focus in this module is on how to gauge the impact of fiscal
and monetary policies on the economy, rather than on what policies should be followed.

Participants are expected to engage in discussions throughout the course and are divided into small groups, under the direction
of counselors, to conduct practical workshop exercises that apply the diagnostic and analytical tools presented in the lectures.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 3/7/2011 4/1/2011 English 10/1/2010

IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 8/22/2011 9/16/2011 English 3/18/2011

Macroeconomic Diagnostics (MDS)


(Two-week MDS)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials, either in central banks or in ministries such as finance and economy, who
are closely involved in assessing overall macroeconomic developments and prospects.

† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 37
Qualifications: Participants are expected to have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience, good quanti-
tative skills, and proficiency in the use of computers to analyze data.

Course Description: The two-week MDS is a condensed version of the four-week course.

This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims at strengthening the ability of participants to assess a country’s
macroeconomic situation, emphasizing practical tools for use in day-to-day macroeconomic analysis of developments in com-
plex economies. The course draws heavily on actual country experiences and focuses on diagnostic and analytic tools that
typically are not well covered in macroeconomics textbooks or in university courses. The lectures cover three broad areas:
• Understanding the current state of the macroeconomy. This module considers tools that can be used for analyzing
current developments in aggregate demand and supply, inflation, the labor market, and the external sector.
• Assessing medium-term flows, balance-sheet effects, and sustainability. This module examines tools for analyzing the
macroeconomy in a medium-term setting, including evaluation of the government’s financial position, competitiveness
and the exchange rate, the country’s external position, and corporate and financial sector balance sheets.
• Measuring the macroeconomic effects of policy. The focus in this module is on how to gauge the impact of fiscal
and monetary policies on the economy, rather than on what policies should be followed. Participants are expected
to engage in discussions throughout the course.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Other Training Venue (OT) in Asia* 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 English By Invitation
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 English 11/19/2010
Other Training Venue (OT) in Western Hemisphere* 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 Spanish By Invitation
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 English 12/10/2010
Other Training Venue (OT) in the Middle East* 5/29/2011 6/9/2011 English By Invitation
Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 6/27/2011 7/8/2011 English By Invitation
Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 French By Invitation
Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 9/12/2011 9/23/2011 Spanish By Invitation
Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 9/12/2011 9/23/2011 English By Invitation
Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) – Dalian, China 10/17/2011 10/28/2011 English (Chinese) By Invitation
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 11/7/2011 11/18/2011 English 6/10/2011

Macroeconomic Forecasting (MF)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials involved in developing forecasts that are used in the design and implemen-
tation of macroeconomic policy.

Qualifications: Participants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience. They should also be
comfortable using software for econometric applications such as EViews.

Course Description: The course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims to strengthen participants’ macroeconomic fore-
casting and modeling skills through the application of modern econometric techniques. Lectures are designed to include a
discussion of underlying theory, live presentations of empirical analyses on a personal computer, and hands-on learning by
participants in a computer lab. The course focuses on four aspects of empirical model building and forecasting:

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.


†Interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 38 |
• data and model properties, including stationarity, non-stationarity and co-integration;
• dynamic specification, including the use of error correction models;
• model evaluation and model design;
• forecast uncertainty, forecasting for policy, and policy analysis; and
• combination forecasts.

Participants apply the techniques to a case study country for which they estimate a model, evaluate it, and then use the
model for forecasting.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 English 10/22/2010

Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) – Dalian, China 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 English (Chinese) By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 English 11/26/2010

Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 10/3/2011 10/14/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 11/28/2011 12/9/2011 English 7/1/2011

Macroeconomic Implications of Fiscal Issues (MIF)

Target Audience: Junior officials from both ministries of finance and central banks who would benefit from a broader
understanding of the macroeconomic dimensions of fiscal policy issues.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have a degree of economics or a related field, experience in macroeconomic
analysis, and facility with MS Excel software.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute, aims to give par-
ticipants a more extensive exposure to fiscal issues and the macroeconomic effects of fiscal policy than is possible in a nor-
mal, two-week course on financial programming and policies. Separate lectures are devoted to fiscal accounts and analysis,
issues in tax policy and administration, expenditure issues, fiscal forecasting, fiscal sustainability, interrelations between the
fiscal sector and the rest of the economy, and the fiscal dimension in financial programming. There are also presentations
on selected fiscal issues of current interest.

About half the course time is allocated to workshops. These include sessions on fiscal accounting and analysis, tax and
expenditure policy, fiscal sustainability, and fiscal forecasting. There is also a mini-financial programming exercise focused
on fiscal issues.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 11/14/2011 11/25/2011 English 6/17/2011

†Interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 39
Macroeconomic Management and Debt Issues (MDI)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials, preferably from ministries of finance, debt agencies, or central banks, who
provide advice on or implement macroeconomic and debt policies.

Qualifications: Participants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience and be proficient in
the use of spreadsheets.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, covers both conceptual issues and practical
applications and includes:
• Sessions on policy issues. This module mainly addresses debt management policy from both macroeconomic and
microeconomic perspectives, debt restructuring, the coordination of debt management policy with other policies,
financial and debt crises, and financial market development.
• Sessions on concepts and techniques. This module covers different concepts of debt, a framework for debt
sustainability analysis, debt restructuring mechanisms, and the HIPC and MDRI Initiatives.
• Case studies and workshops that illustrate the application of debt concepts, restructuring mechanisms, and debt
sustainability analysis.

Participants are divided into small groups, under the direction of counselors, to conduct practical workshop exercises that
apply the analytical tools presented during the lectures.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 1/24/2011 2/4/2011 French By Invitation

Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues (MMF)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials in central banks, ministries of finance, and regulatory agencies involved in
the formulation and implementation of macroeconomic and financial policies.

Qualifications: Participants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, examines the policy dilemmas confronting authori-
ties in developing and emerging market economies, and the options available to policymakers, with special attention to how
financial sector issues interact with macroeconomic management. The course covers a number of key macroeconomic topics,
such as stabilization and growth, fiscal and external debt sustainability, frameworks for monetary policy, choice of the exchange
rate regime, and international capital flows. It also addresses financial sector topics, such as the role of the financial sector in the
economy, the relationship between financial fragility and macroeconomic stability, financial sector policies, and policies to address
financial crises. The course content will be differentiated to better address issues relevant to different regions.

Participants are expected to engage in discussions throughout the course and are divided into small groups, under the
direction of counselors, to conduct workshop exercises aimed at solidifying their understanding of the lecture materials.
Participants may also be asked to make presentations on key policy issues of interest in their countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 1/17/2011 1/28/2011 English By Invitation

† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 40 |
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 2/14/2011 2/25/2011 English (Russian) 10/1/2010

Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) – Dalian, China 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 English (Chinese) By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 French By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 Spanish Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Europe* 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 English By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 7/25/2011 8/5/2011 English By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Central Asia* 8/8/2011 8/19/2011 English (Russian) By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Europe* 9/5/2011 9/13/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 10/10/2011 10/21/2011 English (Russian) 5/13/2011

Other Training Venue (OT) in the Middle East 11/27/2011 12/8/2011 Arabic By Invitation

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy (MFP)


(Four-week MFP)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level government officials in ministries of finance, economy, and planning, or in central
banks, who provide advice on macroeconomic policies or who are involved in policy implementation.

Qualifications: Applicants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience and the ability to use
spreadsheets.

Course Description: This four-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims at deepening participants’ understand-
ing of fiscal policy issues and their implications for macroeconomic management. It covers the interrelations between fiscal
variables and macroeconomic aggregates, and the main aspects of the design and implementation of fiscal policy as an
instrument to achieve macroeconomic adjustment, growth, and poverty reduction. The course draws on the Fund’s experi-
ence in providing fiscal policy advice, on studies undertaken by Fund staff, and on selected research by outside scholars.
Country case studies are used to illustrate the challenges faced by the authorities in addressing fiscal policy issues. The
course includes:
• Sessions on the accounting, analysis, and forecasting of government operations. This module presents the new
fiscal framework (net worth approach) as an analytical tool for assessing the government financial position. It
also covers the interrelations between fiscal and other macroeconomic accounts, as well as the design of fiscal
adjustment in the context of a financial program aimed at achieving sustainable growth.
• Sessions on policy issues. This module covers macroeconomic aspects of fiscal policy, including issues related
to stabilization such as the need to estimate cyclically-adjusted fiscal balances, to assess the role of automatic
stabilizers and discretionary actions, and to determine the size and composition of fiscal adjustment. There are also
sessions on fiscal sustainability, debt relief and the HIPC initiative, and various structural and institutional fiscal
issues, such as growth and poverty reduction, tax reform and administration, expenditure policy and management,
civil service reform, privatization, decentralization, and governance.
• Case studies and workshops. This module includes presentations of country case studies related to particular
aspects of fiscal policy, such as fiscal adjustment, tax reform, and poverty reduction, and several workshops on the
frameworks for fiscal analysis, fiscal sustainability, and debt management.

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 41
During the course, participants are expected to work in small groups on a topic of their choice on which they make a
presentation at the end of the course. Prior to joining the course, participants are encouraged to identify possible topics and
gather relevant information.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF Headquarters (HQ) – Washington, DC 10/20/2011 11/23/2011 French 5/13/2011

Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy (MFP)


(Two-week MFP)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level government officials in ministries of finance, economy, and planning, or in central
banks, who provide advice on macroeconomic policies or who are involved in policy implementation.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent policy experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims at deepening participants’ understand-
ing of fiscal policy issues and their implications for macroeconomic management. It covers the interrelations between fiscal
variables and macroeconomic aggregates, and the main aspects of the design and implementation of fiscal policy as an
instrument to achieve macroeconomic stability and growth. The course draws on the Fund’s experience in providing fiscal
policy advice, on studies undertaken by Fund staff, and on selected research by outside scholars. Topics include: macroeco-
nomic aspects of fiscal policy, such as estimating cyclically-adjusted fiscal balances and the role of automatic stabilizers and
discretionary fiscal policy; fiscal sustainability; and structural and institutional fiscal issues such as tax reform and adminis-
tration, expenditure policy and management, and fiscal rules. Participants are expected to make presentations on key policy
issues of interest in their countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 1/17/2011 1/28/2011 English (Russian) 9/3/2010

Other Training Venue (OT) in Western Hemisphere* 2/7/2011 2/18/2011 English By Invitation

IMF-AMF Regional Training Program (RTP) – Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates 3/13/2011 3/24/2011 Arabic By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 3/14/2011 3/25/2011 English 10/15/2010

Other Training Venue (OT) in Central Asia* 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 English (Russian) By Invitation

Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 Spanish By Invitation

Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 6/6/2011 6/17/2011 French By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in the Middle East 6/12/2011 6/23/2011 Arabic By Invitation

Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 7/18/2011 7/29/2011 English By Invitation

Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 7/25/2011 8/5/2011 English (Russian) 2/25/2011

Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa 10/3/2011 10/14/2011 English By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Western Hemisphere 11/28/2011 12/9/2011 Spanish By Invitation

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.


† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 42 |
Macroeconomic Management in Natural Resource-Rich Countries (MMNR)

Target Audience: Mid to senior-level officials from central banks, ministry of finance and other relevant government
agencies.

Qualifications: Participants should be involved in the design and execution of policies in resource-rich countries and have
a good understanding of macroeconomic, fiscal and financial issues.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, aims at broadening participants’ understand-
ing of the challenges faced by resource-rich countries. Drawing upon the Fund experience as well as academic contribution
to the policy debate, the course aims to provide participants with analytical skills to study the challenges faced by resource-
rich countries and the policy responses. The skills developed during the course would allow participants to inform a wide
range of policies, including the fiscal implications of alternative strategies for natural resource exploitation, monetary and
exchange rate policies, financial sector issues and structural reforms in resource-rich countries. The course will also provide
the opportunity to discuss in depth a number of case studies of natural resource-rich countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 1/31/2011 2/11/2011 English (Russian) 9/17/2010

Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 12/5/2011 12/16/2011 French By Invitation

Macroeconomic Management for Senior Officials (MMSO)

Target Audience: Senior officials, division managers and supervisors of economic staff in central banks, ministries of fi-
nance and economy, and relevant planning agencies.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have a degree in economics or a related field, or experience with economic
policy-making, and be overseeing the work of economists. Officials whose subordinates have attended courses in financial
programming or macroeconomic management are especially encouraged to apply.

Course Description: This one-week seminar, presented by the IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute, addresses the
key macroeconomic issues facing policy-makers, with particular reference to Asian and Pacific countries. A series of lectures
designed to encourage debate and discussion cover such subjects as strategies for enhancing economic growth, inflation
targeting and other approaches to monetary and exchange rate policy, fiscal and external sustainability, and macroeconomic
and financial surveillance. Linkages across macroeconomic sectors are also discussed, and there is a demonstration of
financial programming for a case study country in the region. Selected country case studies are introduced and discussed to
illustrate the broad themes presented in the lectures.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 5/23/2011 5/27/2011 English 12/24/2010

† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 43
Macro-Financial Surveillance (MS) NEW

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials in central banks, ministries of finance, and regulatory agencies.

Qualifications: Participants are expected to have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience, and familiar-
ity with basic concepts in statistics and probability. It is essential that participants be proficient in the use of spreadsheets.

Course Description: This new two-week course, offered by the IMF Institute, presents an overview of some of the ana-
lytical tools used to assess macro-financial linkages and conduct macro-financial surveillance. Participants will learn about
methods used for extracting information about macroeconomic variables from asset prices. Also, asset prices and balance
sheet information will be used to examine financial stability in individual institutions and the overall financial system.

Topics include:
• modeling and interpreting financial market data;
• extracting information from the term structure of interest rates, credit spreads, equity and option prices;
• financial soundness indicators and stress testing;
• elements of risk management and models; and
• definition and measurement of systemic risk.

The course also includes a series of hands-on workshops in which participants are required to apply some of the techniques
presented in lectures. Participants may also be asked to make short presentations on topics of interest in their countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Other Training Venue (OT) in Asia* 11/7/2011 11/18/2011 English By Invitation

Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy (MERP)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials involved in monetary and exchange rate policy issues.

Qualifications: Participants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, introduces participants to the different types
of monetary policy strategies and exchange rate arrangements that countries may choose, emphasizing that the two choices
must be mutually consistent. It addresses the factors relevant for the choices and, the consequences of these choices. Other
topics covered include: determinants and diagnosis of inflation, the foreign exchange market, financial globalization and
capital flows, assessment of the equilibrium real exchange rates, and the pros and cons of capital controls. The course also
covers the monetary policy transmission mechanism and forward-looking strategies for setting policy interest rates, includ-
ing inflation-targeting strategies. Considerable attention is paid to the implementation of monetary policy, including the use
of forecasting models and the design of a structured system for monetary policy analysis.

Participants are expected to engage in discussions throughout the course and are divided into small groups, under the
direction of counselors, to conduct practical workshop exercises aimed at solidifying their understanding of the lecture
material.

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

page 44 |
Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 English (Russian) 12/10/2010
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 7/4/2011 7/15/2011 English 2/4/2011
Other Training Venue (OT) in Africa* 10/24/2011 11/4/2011 English By Invitation

Monetary and Financial Statistics (MFS)

Target Audience: Central bank officials responsible for the compilation of monetary statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, is designed to assist officials in the com-
pilation of monetary and financial statistics in accordance with international best practices. The course material is based on
the Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual and the Monetary and Financial Statistics: Compilation Guide, which expand
on the definitions, classifications, and valuation principles for monetary and financial macroeconomic analysis within the
framework of the System of National Accounts.

The course discusses the principles of economic sectorization, the characteristics and classification of financial instruments,
valuation, and other accounting issues that are relevant to the compilation of analytical accounts for the entire financial
sector, comprising the central bank, other depository corporations, and other financial corporations. The course consists of
lectures, workshops, and case studies that familiarize participants with practical aspects of monetary statistics compilation;
in particular the recently introduced standardized report forms (SRFs). It also focuses on financial statistics, which comprise
the financial flows and stocks of all sectors of the domestic economy and their interactions with the rest of the world, and
the balance sheet approach for vulnerability analysis. Lectures address the interrelationships between monetary, balance of
payments, government finance, and national accounts statistics. Participants are expected to make a short presentation on
monetary statistics compilation issues in their countries.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint India-IMF Training Program (ITP) – Pune, India 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 English By Invitation
Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 4/11/2011 4/29/2011 French By Invitation
Joint China-IMF Training Program (CTP) – Dalian, China 11/14/2011 12/2/2011 English (Chinese) By Invitation
IMF Headquarters – Washington, DC 9/26/2011 10/21/2011 English 4/22/2011

Monetary Policy Analysis (MPA)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials involved in monetary policy decision making that relies on partly/predomi-
nantly on model-based framework; and staff involved in operating macroeconomic models.

Qualifications: Participants should have an advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience. They should also be
comfortable using software such as Matlab or EViews.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, addresses demand for training in the area of
forward-looking, model-based monetary policy analysis and is centered on a reduced-form, New Keynesian model. Participants
*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.
† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 45
are exposed to the theoretical foundations of New Keynesian macroeconomics and reflection thereof in a model that is akin
to those used in central banks in both advanced and emerging market countries. The model is then re-calibrated and taken
to the selected-country data for policy analysis and forecast. Attention is paid to filtering of data in a multivariate framework
(Kalman filtration) and near-term forecasts. Participants are divided daily into small groups, under the direction of counselors,
to conduct workshop exercises aimed at practicing the techniques presented in lectures. The approach followed in the course
does not favor any particular monetary regime. Rather, it presents modeling alternatives to be used in the case of a floating
exchange rate and a pegged exchange rate, as well as in the case of incomplete control of the money market.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 8/22/2011 9/2/2011 English 3/25/2011

Mortgage Markets, Securitization, and Structured Finance (MSF)

Target Audience: Senior officials from central banks, regulatory agencies, and ministries who deal with capital market
development, financial regulation and supervision, and financial market surveillance.

Qualifications: Participants should have sufficient back ground in financial economics and the relevant experience to dis-
cuss policy and technical issues related to the topic of the course.

Course Description: This one-week seminar focuses on the development of mortgage markets, including the role played
by securitization and structured products. It examines the securitization process and the creation of structured products, the
market infrastructure needed to carry out these operations, and how and why financial institutions, institutional investors,
corporations, and governments engage in these markets. It discusses the benefits and pitfalls, explores the main supervisory
and regulatory challenges posed by market development, and assesses the implications for financial stability. Case studies of
mortgage markets and related institutions are used to illustrate the issues.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 6/20/2011 6/24/2011 English By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in Western Hemisphere* 10/17/2011 10/21/2011 English By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 11/28/2011 12/2/2011 English By Invitation

National Accounts Statistics (NAS)

Target Audience: The NAS course is primarily designed for compilers of national accounts statistics employed by agencies
responsible for official national accounts data.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics/statistics or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, covers theoretical and practi-
cal aspects in the compilation of national accounts statistics based on the conceptual framework of the System of National
Accounts 2008 (2008 SNA). The course consists of lectures covering methodological and compilation issues of the 2008 SNA
and workshops consisting of practical exercises in compiling the accounts. The main aim of the course is to train partici-

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

page 46 |
pants in the compilation of annual gross domestic product both at current prices and in volume terms using the production
and expenditure approaches.

The course starts with an overview of the system of national accounts presenting the sequence of accounts for transactions
and other flows as well as balance sheets with a focus on the framework of the 2008 SNA. It will cover the main concepts
involving transactions, other economic flows, stocks, institutional units, classifications, and main macroeconomic aggre-
gates measured by the system. The main lectures and workshops include: (i) sessions on the production account covering
the definition and measurement of output, intermediate consumption, and value added; valuation issues; and the treatment
of particular industries; (ii) source data and issues in the compilation of GDP by production and expenditure approaches
(iii) deflators and derivation of volume measures of GDP; and (iv) specific issues related to goods and services transactions,
including supply and use framework, inventory valuation adjustment, consumption of fixed capital, non-observed and infor-
mal economy. Emphasis is also placed on sharing country experiences among the participants.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 Spanish By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 4/11/2011 4/22/2011 English By Invitation

Other Training Venue (OT) in the Middle East* 10/16/2011 10/27/2011 English By Invitation

Price Statistics (PRS)

Target Audience: Senior and mid-level officials who have responsibility for, and direct experience of, compiling at least
one of the following price indices: the CPI, PPI, or export and import price indices XMPIs.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics or statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week course, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, is intended to broaden partici-
pants’ understanding of the theory and practice of compiling consumer price indices (CPIs), producer price indices (PPIs),
and export and import price indices (XMPIs). It covers index number theory and its practical implications relating to the
choice of index number formula at lower and higher levels of aggregation. The course also covers methods for sampling
and collecting data from retail outlets and enterprises. The role of price indices as deflators in the 2008 System of National
Accounts (2008 SNA) is outlined, as are related issues of scope, coverage, and valuation principles. There are sessions on
methods for handling temporarily and permanently unavailable items; undertaking adjustments to prices for quality chang-
es; including new products, establishments and outlets; and chaining and linking indices with updated weighting structures.
The course follows the principles and recommended practice given in the CPI (2004), PPI (2004), and XMPI (2009) manuals.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 9/19/2011 9/30/2011 English By Invitation

Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop (PDS) NEW

Target Audience: Officials whose main responsibility is compiling public sector debt statistics.

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

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Training Catalog 2011 page 47
Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics, statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week workshop, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, focuses on the conceptual
framework of public sector debt statistics as presented in the Public Sector Debt Statistics Guide (expected to be published in
2011), as well as on the practical aspects of public sector debt data compilation. Basic concepts, accounting principles, and de-
tailed classifications are dealt with in the context of the methodology that is harmonized with the government finance statistics
and system of national accounts. The workshop examines the coverage and accounting rules of the public sector debt statis-
tics framework, valuation, classification, selected methodological issues, and the sources and methods used for compiling the
statistics. It also deals with debt data reporting to the IMF and the World Bank. The workshop is organized around a series of
case studies.

Location Begin Date End Date Language† Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 9/5/2011 9/16/2011 English (Russian) By Invitation

Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop for G20+ Countries (PDS) NEW

Target Audience: Officials whose main responsibility is compiling public sector debt statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics or statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This two-week workshop for G20+ countries, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, focuses on the
conceptual framework of public sector debt statistics as presented in the Public Sector Debt Statistics Guide (expected to be pub-
lished in 2011), as well as on the practical aspects of public sector debt data compilation. Basic concepts, accounting principles,
and detailed classifications are dealt with in the context of the methodology that is harmonized with the government finance
statistics and system of national accounts. The workshop examines the coverage and accounting rules of the public sector debt
statistics framework, valuation, classification, selected methodological issues, and the sources and methods used for compiling
the statistics. It also deals with debt data reporting to the IMF and the World Bank. The workshop is organized around a series of
case studies.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 3/7/2011 3/18/2011 English By Invitation

Public Sector Debt Statistics Workshop for Senior Officials (PDSO) NEW

Target Audience: Officials at the managerial level whose main responsibility is the compilation and dissemination, rather
than the analysis, of public sector debt statistics.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics or statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This one-week workshop, presented by the IMF’s Statistics Department, focuses on various aspects
of compiling and disseminating public sector debt statistics, in the context of the Public Sector Debt Statistics Guide (ex-
pected to be published in 2011). The workshop will familiarize senior officials from agencies responsible for public sector
debt statistics with basic concepts, accounting principles, and classifications of the Guide, as well as with key linkages to
government finance and national accounts statistics. Selected methodological issues in public sector debt statistics and debt
† Simultaneous interpretation is provided in the language in parentheses.

page 48 |
statistics reporting to the IMF and World Bank will be discussed. Participants will explore the collaboration among national
data compilers, and good practices with regard to fiscal data dissemination, including the IMF’s Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS) and General Data Dissemination System (GDDS).

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Regional Training Center for Latin America (BTC) – Brasilia, Brazil 7/11/2011 7/15/2011 Spanish By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 10/24/2011 10/28/2011 English By Invitation

Real Property Taxation (RPT) NEW

Target Audience: Mid-level and senior staff in Ministries of Finance involved in tax policy-making in general and property
taxation, in particular.

Qualifications: Participants should have a degree in economics or statistics, or equivalent experience.

Course Description: This one-week course, presented by the IMF’s Fiscal Affairs department, will provide an overview of in-
ternational experience and best practices with respect to introduction and reforms of market-value-based property taxation. The
course will start out by providing an overview of the economic arguments in favor of property taxation, including arguments
stemming from increased international economic integration and tax competition, as well as the extent to which different groups
of countries make different use of this tax source. It will then proceed with a treatment of the different basic issues pertaining
to the design of a good property tax, including the scope and definition of the base (for example, residential versus business
property; use of taxation thresholds), valuation methods available, issues relating to the tax rate structure, and the importance
of effective administration, not least the presence of an accurate cadastre. Participants will be expected to briefly lay out the key
structures of their respective national property tax systems as well as reform plans being considered. These systems and associ-
ated plans will then be discussed and evaluated against the general principles of sound property tax design presented during
the course.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 7/18/2011 7/22/2011 English (Russian) By Invitation

Risk-Based Banking Supervision (BSO)

Target Audience: Mid-level bank supervisors.

Qualifications: Participants should have experience with banking supervision—either on-site or off-site banking supervi-
sion—and be comfortable with fundamental analytical techniques.

Course Description: In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, risk-based supervision (RBS), as well as Basel II, have
come under some sharp criticism. This one-week course, presented by the IMF’s Monetary and Capital Markets department,
focuses on the fundamentals and goals of RBS while discussing and addressing some of its shortcomings. The course com-
bines both lectures and practical applications and seeks to balance the discussion of technical, financial modeling techniques
with that of less analytical bank supervision techniques. The first day of the course covers the different concepts of RBS and
discusses the different approaches taken under its guise. The three middle days address FX, interest rate, and operational risk

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 49
assessment and stress testing techniques, respectively. The final day, as well as some short sessions inserted in previous days,
discusses combining information for constructing supervisory scores and resource allocation for supervisory monitoring.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 4/25/2011 4/29/2011 English By Invitation

Safeguards Assessments of Central Banks (SAC)

Target Audience: Senior central bank staff responsible for accounting, financial reporting, auditing, risk management, in-
ternal control, statistics, legal, or reserve management operations, or serving on a board or committee covering the oversight
of audit, investment or financial reporting activities.

Qualifications: Participants with university or post-graduate degrees in the disciplines of accounting, business, economics,
finance, or law or having earned professional certifications in auditing (chartered or certified public accountants, internal
auditors, or information systems auditors) or finance (certified financial analysts).

Course Description: This one-week course, presented by the IMF’s Finance Department, is designed to provide central bank
officials with an interactive exposure to the IMF’s safeguards assessment methodology. In particular, the seminar highlights the
importance of central bank governance, transparency, and accountability in improving financial safeguards. The seminar will
also provide a forum for central bank staff to exchange views on their experiences in strengthening safeguards frameworks,
including emerging challenges and issues. The design of the course combines interactive lectures and discussions, workshops,
and case studies addressing key assessment areas, including the external and internal audit mechanisms, financial reporting
framework, system of internal controls, management of international reserves, and reporting of monetary data to the Fund.
The objective is to provide participants with the knowledge and skills required to assess the strengths and vulnerabilities of
the financial safeguards in their central banks and to identify specific steps that can be taken to strengthen these safeguards. It
also covers the methodology and procedures used to monitor the safeguards framework at central banks.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Vienna Institute (JVI) – Vienna, Austria 4/4/2011 4/8/2011 English By Invitation

IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI) – Singapore 12/5/2011 12/9/2011 English By Invitation

page 50 |
Sovereign Liability Management – Principles and Practices (SLM)

Target Audience: Senior and mid-level debt managers and central bankers. This includes staff with policy and operational
responsibilities relating to monitoring and managing sovereign liabilities and the development and functioning of domestic
debt markets.

Qualifications: Background in accounting and finance, along with familiarity with debt sustainability analysis, debt man-
agement, and debt market operations, is desirable.

Course Description: This one-week course, presented by the IMF’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department, is intended to
broaden participants’ understanding of the main policy and operational issues in public debt management, including tech-
niques used for active debt operations and debt market development. Emphasis will be given to the risk measurement of a
bonded debt portfolio in the context of solvency of a sovereign’s balance sheet. The course considers, inter-alia, the following:
• Effective organizational arrangements.
• Determining the basic building blocks of public debt management, including objectives and identification of risks.
• Coordination with key policy areas, including monetary and fiscal policy.
• Technical and operational aspects of sovereign liability management.
• Measuring key portfolio risks, including currency, interest rate and refinancing exposures.
• Technical and implementation aspects of developing a medium-term debt management strategy.
• Link between public debt management and debt sustainability analysis.
• Techniques for active debt management operations and debt market development.
• Integrating sovereign assets into the decision-making framework.
• Asset-liability management considerations in strategy formulation, including institutional objectives and constraints.

Also, the course will use simulation-based tools and country case studies to illustrate the implementation of appropriate
debt management strategies within the macroeconomic framework. A course survey will be commissioned, aimed at obtain-
ing information on current regional practices in these areas.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Joint Partnership for Africa (JPA) – Tunis, Tunisia 10/10/2011 10/14/2011 English By Invitation

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Training Catalog 2011 page 51
The Use of DSGE Models in the Policymaking Process (SEM)

Target Audience: Mid- to senior-level officials involved in the macroeconomic analysis of monetary and fiscal policy issues
with dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models.

Qualifications: Participants should have and advanced degree in economics or equivalent experience, good quantitative
skills, and a basic knowledge of MatLab or equivalent software.

Course Description: This one-week course, presented by the IMF Institute, focuses on the use and interpretation of dy-
namic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models. The emphasis is on applications of fiscal and monetary policies using
models with nominal and real rigidities that are commonly used in central banks and ministries of finance. The course will
rely on case studies relevant for the western hemisphere region to illustrate the application of these models, and to show
how they can be used as an input in the policymaking process.

Location Begin Date End Date Language Application Deadline


Other Training Venue (OT) in Western Hemisphere* 1/31/2011 2/4/2011 English By Invitation

*Course locations will be posted on the IMF Institute’s website at www.imf.org/institute.

page 52 |
Deadlines for Courses by Application
Application
Deadline Number Title Begin date End date Language
IMF Headquarters (HQ)
8/20/2010 HQ11.01 Financial Programming and Policies 1/24/2011 2/25/2011 English
9/17/2010 HQ11.02 Financial Programming and Policies 2/21/2011 3/25/2011 French
10/1/2010 HQ11.03 Macroeconomic Diagnostics 3/7/2011 4/1/2011 English
11/12/2010 HQ11.04 Government Finance Statistics 4/18/2011 5/13/2011 English
12/3/2010 HQ11.06 Balance of Payments Statistics 5/9/2011 6/17/2011 English
12/31/2010 HQ11.07 Financial Programming and Policies 6/6/2011 7/8/2011 English
3/18/2011 HQ11.08 Macroeconomic Diagnostics 8/22/2011 9/16/2011 English
3/25/2011 HQ11.09 External Debt Statistics 8/29/2011 9/23/2011 English
4/22/2011 HQ11.10 Monetary and Financial Statistics 9/26/2011 10/21/2011 English
4/29/2011 HQ11.11 Financial Programming and Policies 10/3/2011 11/4/2011 Arabic
5/13/2011 HQ11.12 Financial Programming and Policies-Inflation Targeting 10/17/2011 11/18/2011 Spanish
5/13/2011 HQ11.13 Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy 10/20/2011 11/23/2011 French
Distance Learning (DL)
9/10/2010 DL11.31 Financial Programming and Policies – Distance Segment 1/10/2011 3/18/2011 English
3/11/2011 DL11.33 Financial Programming and Policies – Distance Segment 8/15/2011 10/21/2011 English
3/18/2011 DL11.35 Financial Programming and Policies – Distance Segment 8/22/2011 10/28/2011 French
Joint Vienna Institute (JVI)
9/3/2010 JV11.01 Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy 1/17/2011 1/28/2011 English (Russian)
9/17/2010 JV11.02 Macroeconomic Management in Natural Resource-Rich Countries 1/31/2011 2/11/2011 English (Russian)
10/1/2010 JV11.03 Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues 2/14/2011 2/25/2011 English (Russian)
11/5/2010 JV11.08 Financial Programming and Policies 4/4/2011 4/15/2011 English (Russian)
11/19/2010 JV11.10 Macroeconomic Diagnostics 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 English
11/26/2010 JV11.11 Macroeconomic Forecasting 4/25/2011 5/6/2011 English
12/10/2010 JV11.12 Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 English (Russian)
2/25/2011 JV11.18 Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy 7/25/2011 8/5/2011 English (Russian)
3/25/2011 JV11.20 Monetary Policy Analysis 8/22/2011 9/2/2011 English
4/22/2011 JV11.23 Financial Programming and Policies 9/19/2011 9/30/2011 English (Russian)
5/13/2011 JV11.24 Financial Market Analysis 10/10/2011 10/21/2011 English
5/13/2011 JV11.25 Macroeconomic Management and Financial Sector Issues 10/10/2011 10/21/2011 English (Russian)
5/27/2011 JV11.26 External Vulnerabilities 10/24/2011 11/4/2011 English (Russian)
6/10/2011 JV11.27 Macroeconomic Diagnostics 11/7/2011 11/18/2011 English
7/1/2011 JV11.28 Macroeconomic Forecasting 11/28/2011 12/9/2011 English
IMF-Singapore Regional Training Institute (STI)
8/13/2010 ST11.51 Financial Programming and Policies 1/10/2011 1/21/2011 English
10/15/2010 ST11.04 Macroeconomic Management and Fiscal Policy 3/14/2011 3/25/2011 English
10/22/2010 ST11.05 Macroeconomic Forecasting 3/21/2011 4/1/2011 English
11/19/2010 ST11.08 Financial Market Analysis 4/18/2011 4/29/2011 English
11/26/2010 ST11.09 Risk-Based Banking Supervision 4/25/2011 4/29/2011 English
12/10/2010 ST11.10 Macroeconomic Diagnostics 5/9/2011 5/20/2011 English
12/24/2010 ST11.52 Macroeconomic Management for Senior Officials 5/23/2011 5/27/2011 English
1/14/2011 ST11.11 Financial Programming and Policies 6/13/2011 6/24/2011 English
2/4/2011 ST11.12 Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy 7/4/2011 7/15/2011 English
6/17/2011 ST11.53 Macroeconomic Implications of Fiscal Issues 11/14/2011 11/25/2011 English

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Training Catalog 2011 page 53
Administrative Arrangements
Admission to courses held in Washington (HQ), Vienna (JVI), and Singapore
(STI)—as well as to distance learning (DL) courses—may be either by
application or by invitation. For courses held at all other locations—Brasilia,
Brazil (BTC); Dalian, China (CTP); Pune, India (ITP); Abu Dhabi, United Arab
Emirates (RTP); Tunis, Tunisia (JPA)—admission is by invitation only. The
invitation process may vary from one center to another, but candidates
from targeted countries are generally nominated by government agencies
upon the request of the IMF department responsible for delivering the
course. Candidates who meet the qualifications for the course and are
selected will be contacted by the IMF Institute or regional training centers
to provide information on travel, accommodations, and other administrative
arrangements for the course. Applications are not accepted for courses
marked as “By Invitation.”

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Training Catalog 2011 page 55
i
✔ Application Process for HQ, DL, JVI, and STI

For courses by application at HQ, DL, JVI, or STI, applicants must use the online application system (OAS) at
$ www.imf.org/insapply to complete and submit their applications. For courses by invitation, nominees should use
i the online nomination system (ONS). The link to the ONS will be provided in the nomination request letter.

✔ Application Requirements (HQ, DL, JVI, and STI)

Applications for HQ courses should be completed in the language of the course, except for courses conducted in
$ Arabic, for which applications should be completed in English. Applications for all courses conducted at JVI and
STI should be completed in English. The IMF Admissions Committee may require an approved language test for
applicants whose working language is not the same as the course language. Applicants from non-English-speak-
ing countries who are applying to a course in English generally will be required to provide scores for either the
Test for English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) to
show English proficiency. The IMF code for transmission of TOEFL results is 5456.

Each applicant must be employed by an eligible governmental agency and must have a sponsor—a senior official
in the agency where he or she works—complete and sign the Sponsor’s Nomination and Certification Form,
which also may be downloaded from the web.

For courses offered through Distance Learning, applicants must be allowed to study part-time while remaining
on the job and have:
• access to an e-mail account and experience in electronic file transmission over the Internet;
• proficiency in working with Excel spreadsheets; and
• access to a computer with a CD-ROM drive, sound card, Windows (98 or more recent edition), Excel,
Word, and Internet access.

Applicants for distance learning courses should not be sponsored unless they will be given time to work on
course material during the distance segment of the courses.
i
✔ Selection Process (HQ, DL, JVI, and STI)

Applications must reach the IMF Institute by the application deadline indicated for each course. Late or incom-
plete applications are not processed. For each course by application at HQ, DL, or JVI, an Admissions Com-
$
mittee—comprised of staff from the IMF Institute, the responsible IMF training department and the IMF’s area
departments—reviews all applications and determines which applicants are most eligible to attend. Applicants
are normally informed of the Admissions Committee’s decisions 10 weeks before the start date of the course,
and sponsors of accepted or wait-listed applicants are also informed. Notification will be sent only to the official
sponsors designated on the application forms.

The selection process for STI courses by application is conducted by IMF staff at the STI in close collaboration
with the IMF. Information provided by IMF area departments and resident representatives, the department re-
sponsible for training, and IMF Institute staff is considered by STI staff when making a decision regarding which
applicants are most eligible to attend. Selected candidates are directly notified of their acceptance.

Officials who are selected to attend courses at HQ, JVI, and STI are provided access to course extranet sites
where they can obtain course information and detailed information about administrative arrangements. These
secure sites also provide participants with all the necessary administrative forms related to their trips from their
home countries to their training destinations.

page 56 |
The selection processes for courses at HQ, JVI, and STI give priority to those applicants whose professional
assignments are closely related to the subject matter of the specified courses. For courses on macroeconomic sta-
tistics, priority is given to statistical compilers. IMF Institute courses tend to be most appropriate for officials from
ministries of finance, economy, and planning, as well as central banks and statistics bureaus. The IMF Institute
cannot consider applications from persons employed in non-governmental institutions or businesses, such as
commercial banks, as well as universities or trade unions.

Official sponsors should not present applicants who fail to meet the criteria of academic background and job
relevance, or who are not fluent in the language of instruction (or simultaneous interpretation, where provided).
Only participants who will be available to serve their governments for a reasonable time after receiving training
should be proposed. Sponsoring agencies should not submit more than three applications per course for their
agency. When more than one candidate is presented, the sponsor should indicate an order of priority.

The sponsoring agency is required to certify that, if accepted, the applicant will receive leave of absence with
regular pay for the duration of the course; that during his or her attendance at the course, the applicant will be
given no other duties or assignments; and that upon return to duty the applicant will be placed in his or her
former position, or in one with equal or greater responsibility.

The same selection criteria and guidelines for sponsors apply to courses for which sponsoring agencies are in-
vited to nominate participants. Nominated candidates are not accepted unless they meet the criteria of academic
i background, job relevance, and language fluency; and sponsoring agencies should indicate an order of priority
when they nominate more than one candidate.

Eligibility Criteria Relating to Previous Course Attendance (HQ, DL, JVI, and STI)

$ Because the IMF has a limited capacity to provide training, previous participation is taken into account when
considering applicants or nominees for IMF courses.
• Attendees of a Financial Programming and Policies (FPP) course at HQ or a distance learning FPP course
should generally wait two years before applying to attend another course.
• Attendees of a course at any one training center are not eligible to attend the same course at another
training center. Attendees of a two-week FPP course, however, are eligible to apply to take a five-week
FPP at HQ or a distance learning FPP.

Travel to Washington and Administrative Arrangements

The IMF Institute will prepay the airline ticket and make travel arrangements for participants through the Fund’s
American Express office.

i
1. Travel. Participants in courses at HQ must arrive a day or two before a course begins and remain
through its conclusion. In case of a participant’s withdrawal, either before or during the course, expenses,
✔ such as cancellation fees or the full amount of a prepaid ticket will have to be reimbursed by the sponsor
to the IMF. No expenses for (or on behalf of) a participant’s family will be paid by the IMF. Participants
are covered by travel accident insurance during travel to and from Washington and while in official atten-
i $ dance at the IMF Institute.

✔ 2. Accommodations. Each participant will be provided with free accommodations. Specific details on
accommodations will be made available after the selection process.

$ 3. Living Allowance. Each participant will receive a living allowance. This allowance is intended to cover
the cost of meals and some of the participant’s incidental expenses. However, the allowance does not

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 57
i
✔ cover all additional expenses; therefore, participants should be prepared to supplement the allowance
with their own funds.

$ Health Insurance. Arrangements are made by the IMF Institute to provide participants in courses with
4.
health insurance benefits covering essential medical and hospital expenses. These benefits, however,
do not cover expenses incurred in connection with pre-existing medical conditions, such as pregnancy.
Sponsors are required to finance any medical expense not covered by health insurance benefits. If the
applicant is accepted, he/she should be in good health to be able to participate fully in the course. If a
participant misses a substantial amount of the course due to illness, they may not receive a certificate
of completion. The IMF Institute should be informed prior to participant’s arrival of any medical issues
which may affect full participation in the course.
Sponsors are required to certify (i) that immediately prior to the course, participants are in good health,
i
free from any contagious disease or pre-existing medical conditions, and free from any physical or mental
condition or disability that could impair their full participation in the course; and (ii) that the sponsoring
agency will reimburse the IMF for all medical expenses incurred on behalf of participants and their
families as a result of any of the medical conditions noted above.

? $
5. Miscellaneous. Details on visas, insurance (travel, medical, and other types), accommodations,
and other arrangements are posted on the course extranet sites—to which accepted participants
are given access— along with background information on settling-in. Participants are provided with
e-mail accounts upon arrival and Internet access free of charge at the IMF’s training facilities and
accommodations.

Travel to Vienna and Administrative Arrangements

i
1. Travel. The participant or the sponsoring agency is responsible for purchasing the participant’s round-
trip airline or train ticket and making travel arrangements. Participants are reimbursed for tickets and
✔ related travel expenses shortly after their arrival in Vienna. Upon receipt of a request from the sponsor
within ten days of acceptance letter, the IMF will make travel arrangements for the participant. In case
of a withdrawal or failure to attend the course, expenses such as cancellation fees or the full amount of
$ a prepaid ticket must be reimbursed to the IMF. Participants are required to arrive on time, attend all
sessions, and stay through the last day of the course. The invitation may be withdrawn if a participant
cannot comply with these requirements. If a participant has to be repatriated for any reason before the
end of the training, the sponsoring agency is responsible for the costs of the repatriation, and the IMF
i must be reimbursed for all expenditures made on behalf of the participant.

✔ 2. Accommodations. Accommodations and breakfast are provided by the JVI. Spouses and guests are
not accommodated at the JVI residence.

$ 3. Living Allowance. For the duration of the training at the JVI, the IMF provides a living allowance
intended to cover the cost of meals and some of the participant’s incidental expenses.

page 58 |
i

i
4.$ Health Insurance. Participants are provided with health insurance benefits covering medical
emergencies only. These benefits will not cover expenses incurred in connection with pre-existing
medical conditions, including pregnancy.

? $
5. Miscellaneous. Information on visas, medical insurance, accommodations, settling-in, and other
arrangements is sent to each participant after he or she has accepted an invitation to attend the course.

Travel to Singapore and Administrative Arrangements

i
1. Travel. Participants or their sponsoring agencies are responsible for the initial purchase of the
participants’ round-trip airline ticket and for making travel arrangements. Participants will be reimbursed
✔ a fixed amount in US dollars travelers’ checks for their tickets and related travel expenses upon arrival
in Singapore. Under special circumstances and upon receipt of a specific request from the sponsor, STI
will consider making travel arrangements for the participant. In case of a withdrawal, expenses such as
$ cancellation fees or the full amount of a prepaid ticket will have to be reimbursed to STI. Similarly, if a
participant does not complete the course, travel and miscellaneous expenses will have to be reimbursed
to STI.
i
2. Accommodations. Accommodations during the course (including one day before and one day after
✔ the course) are provided free of charge at a hotel near the Monetary Authority of Singapore building
i where STI is located. STI covers room costs; participants are responsible for all other charges.


$ 3. Living Allowance. Participants are provided with a living allowance for the duration of the course. This
allowance is intended to cover the cost of meals and participants’ incidental expenses.

4.$ Health Insurance. STI provides participants with health insurance benefits covering accidents and
emergency medical care. These benefits, however, do not cover expenses incurred in connection with
pre-existing conditions, including pregnancy. Participants should be in good health, free from any
contagious disease, and free from any medical condition that could impair their attendance at the course.
Participants are advised to take a comprehensive medical examination before leaving for Singapore. In
i
connection with participants’ acceptance of invitations to attend STI programs, sponsors (senior officials
from the nominating agencies) must agree to reimburse STI for all expenses incurred on behalf of their
sponsored participants due to any pre-existing medical conditions. Further, sponsors are required to
cover the costs of any medical procedures not covered by the health insurance plan.

? $
5. Miscellaneous. STI sends information on visas, insurance (travel, medical, and other types),
accommodations, settling-in, and other arrangements to each participant after he or she has accepted an
invitation to attend the course.

|
Training Catalog 2011 page 59
Arrangements for BTC, CTP, ITP, and RTP

Courses and seminars at regional training centers and other training venues other than JVI and STI are by in-
vitation only. Candidates are nominated by government agencies of targeted countries upon the request of the
responsible IMF department. The invitation process may vary somewhat from one center to another, but culmi-
nates with an invitation from the IMF Institute to the candidate. Candidates who meet the qualifications for the
course and are selected are contacted by the IMF Institute and given information on travel, accommodations, and
other administrative arrangements for the course.

The IMF Institute – Going Green!

The copy of the Training Catalog that you are holding has been published on paper produced from well-managed
forests, controlled sources and recycled wood or fiber. Beginning in August 2010, the IMF Institute will be elimi-
nating hardcopy application and nomination forms. All applications for HQ, DL, JVI, and STI courses should be
submitted online through the IMF Institute’s Online Application System (OAS) and nominations should be sub-
mitted through the Online Nomination System (ONS). We are proud to join in the global effort of protecting our
environment!

Register to Stay in Touch – Agency Training Contacts

Senior officials who nominate or sponsor participants for IMF courses, those
responsible for training, and previous participants are invited to keep abreast of the
IMF Institute’s training activities by registering online at www.imf.org/institute.
By doing so, you will be signing up to receive emails informing you of upcoming
courses and workshops and also to receive copies the annual IMF training catalog.
The information you provide us is confidential and will be used for training
management purposes only.

page 60 |
2011
Training
Catalog

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND


700 19th Street, NW
WASHINGTON, DC 20431
U.S.A.

FAX: +1 (202) 623-6490


E-MAIL: INSINFO@IMF.ORG
WEB: WWW.IMF.ORG/INSTITUTE

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